IF YOU want to understand how China innovates, look no further than
its hyper-competitive market for smartphones. Though Samsung and Apple
dominate the business globally, the technology superpowers are being
squeezed in China by aggressive local manufacturers. Now Chinese firms
are selling their handsets abroad in ever-greater numbers and a battle
is set to be fought that will reshape the global marketplace for
handsets.
http://www.economist.com/news/business/21627648-chinese-phonemakers-are-preparing-take-world-smartening-up-their-act
China's smartphone-makers have a ready launchpad. Thanks to the frugal
but feature-rich offerings from local firms, domestic sales have
exploded. Over 100m smartphones were sold in the second quarter,
accounting for over a third of global sales and making China the
world's largest market. Strikingly, eight of the top ten vendors were
local firms. Xiaomi, a startup that only sells online, shot past
Samsung to become the leading brand of smartphones in the country.
After selling 15.4m in the second quarter (see chart), the firm is on
track to peddle 60m handsets this year, and wants to sell 100m in
2015.


The rise of the inexpensive smartphone is a boon for Chinese
consumers, many of whom are going online for the first time. However,
Chinese firms are no longer content to scrap for a share of the spoils
at home. They are increasingly eyeing lucrative foreign markets.

With much fanfare, Xiaomi launched in India in July. It did so in
partnership with Flipkart, a leading local e-commerce firm. Xiaomi's
handsets are now also available in most of South-East Asia and the
firm plans to sell in Brazil next. Though it does not officially sell
its phones in America, GPS patterns suggest that around 1m of its
snazzy handsets have been detected in the country. As foreigners find
it hard to pronounce its name, Xiaomi has even grabbed the website
mi.com, perhaps to rebrand itself overseas as "Mi".

Another local firm on the move is OnePlus. Reviewers in developed
markets have been raving about its clever handsets, which offer
top-notch performance and features for around $300--less than half the
list price of the latest iPhone. Carl Pei of OnePlus argues that
unlike its rivals, his firm was "born a global company". Since its
founding late last year, it has targeted 16 countries--including such
challenging markets as America and Britain. "It helps that a lot of
people don't know that we are a Chinese firm," he confides.

Adding to the advance are those Chinese firms that have long been
global, even if they are relatively new to the smartphone business.
Huawei has sold unbranded "white label" handsets to telecoms carriers
for a while, but is now keenly pushing its own Ascend and Honor
brands. Lenovo has spent $2.9 billion to acquire Motorola Mobility,
Google's handset division, which dramatically expands its reach in
North and South America. It, too, has announced plans for a line of
smartphones to be sold only on the internet.

Rumours resurfaced this week that Lenovo might even buy BlackBerry, an
ailing Canadian handset-maker. That seems unlikely as it makes little
sense for a rising star to join hands with a sinking firm: Lenovo
already turns a profit on the phones it sells outside China. Moreover,
concerns that the Chinese government uses local tech companies to
spy--unproven claims that prompted America's Congress to blacklist
Huawei and ZTE, another Chinese telecoms-equipment firm--might prompt
Canadian regulators to block any deal.

They are emerging in force, but how will Chinese firms fare outside
their sheltered home market? Some observers are sceptical, dismissing
Chinese technology firms as shameless copycats incapable of
innovation--the beneficiaries of a dodgy legal system that allows local
firms to infringe international patents and keeps out world-class
foreign competition. Google services, including the app store for its
popular Android operating system, are effectively blocked in China.

Jonathan Ive, Apple's lead designer, gave succour to the naysayers
with recent comments dismissing Xiaomi's designs as derivative: "it
really is theft and it's lazy and I don't think it's OK at all", he
complains. Some things about Xiaomi are clearly borrowed from Apple,
from its sleek designs and pleasing user interface to the Jobsian
jeans-and-black-top presentations given by Lei Jun, the firm's
charismatic founder (see picture).

A serious threat to Chinese firms as they head overseas is lawsuits
from Apple and Samsung, who themselves have long been entangled in
nasty battles over intellectual property (IP). Ben Qiu of Cooley, an
American law firm, believes that "Xiaomi is in dangerous waters of
potential patent-infringement claims on the international markets."
But he argues that the firm's clever management team, which includes
former Google executives, can navigate these perilous seas because it
is well prepared for legal and regulatory battles.

He points out that Tencent, a Chinese internet giant, expanded abroad
successfully in part because its general counsel is a seasoned Silicon
Valley lawyer. In addition to lawyering up, Chinese handset-makers
must also build up arsenals of licences from existing patent holders.
To sell phones in rich countries (which, unlike developing ones,
strictly enforce IP rights) they have been forced to pay a quarter of
revenues to patent holders. Building patent banks can reduce this
burden: a mighty arsenal may scare off lawsuits, and patents can be
sold or cross-licensed as necessary, to avoid conflict. Lenovo has
spent pots of money of late to acquire thousands of patents from NEC,
a Japanese firm, from Motorola and from patent trolls. Most
importantly, they must come up with valuable inventions in-house. To
their credit, Huawei and ZTE are among the world's most prolific
generators of new patents.

That intense rivalry and race to generate new ideas is the best reason
to believe the Chinese upstarts can make it. The confluence of a giant
market and cost-conscious consumers has forced them to squeeze
component costs, make contract manufacturing more efficient and adopt
technological innovations more quickly. This has prepared the best of
the local firms to do battle with global titans.

There is no denying that many Chinese firms got their start by copying
foreign ones at the leading edge. But imitation has often been the
starting point for innovation at companies in the rich world. Apple
did not invent the compact music player or smartphone. Steve Jobs even
flew a pirate's flag atop the old Macintosh headquarters as a reminder
to his employees that innovators need to be rule-breakers. That
transition from imitation to innovation is happening now at a
breathtaking pace in Chinese technology firms.



-- 
Avinash Shahi
Doctoral student at Centre for Law and Governance JNU



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