2014年11月10日星期一

How Alibaba turned 1111 into $$$$

Sad and lonely? Alibaba says buy yourself something nice on "11.11," when China's unattached celebrate being single.
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Alibaba's site TMall is just one online retailer that's delivering sales on Tuesday to encourage singles to buy gifts for themselves.Screenshot by Donna Tam/CNET
Bummed that you're home alone on date night yet again? Don't worry. A new watch or some scuba gear could help.
At least that's the philosophy behind Singles Day, a Chinese festival that encourages those untethered by a significant other to buy themselves gifts.
Observed on November 11 -- or "11.11," for the date with the most 1s -- Singles Day has become the world's biggest online shopping day, thanks to the e-commerce prowess of China's Alibaba Group. Alibaba holds promotions and sales each year on its shopping sites on November 11. This year, Singles Day lands on Tuesday, and it's expected to generate about $8.18 billion in sales for Alibaba, up 42 percent from last year, according to market research firm IDC.
The day started out as a joke among a group of male college students attending Nanjing University in the 1990s. Originally called Bachelor Day because it was celebrated only by young men, the holiday has since morphed into a nationwide holiday for all genders, with its own traditions, according to China Daily. People eat four fried dough sticks representing the four ones in 11.11. Blind-date parties and even matchmaking fairs have become popular November 11 events.
It wasn't long before merchants realized the marketing potential of the holiday. Five years ago, Alibaba, which is China's biggest e-commerce site, began holding its own 11.11 sales. Today, Alibaba's TMall and Taobao shopping sites are filled with 11.11 promotions from thousands of business partners. The gimmick is paying off. Last year, Alibaba sold twice what all US companies sold on Black Friday and Cyber Monday combined -- those are the Friday and Monday, respectively, after Thanksgiving.
"Alibaba has picked up on it and made it its own, much like Hallmark has picked up on Valentine's Day and every other holiday," said Marlene Morris Towns, marketing professor at Georgetown University's McDonough School of Business. "It's been great for their business so far, and I think Amazon would do well to jump on it as well."
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Amazon's Chinese site is entering its second year of promotions for Singles Day.Screenshot by Donna Tam/CNET
Amazon has tried to get a piece of the action. The Seattle-based company launched promotions for the holiday last year on its Chinese site, and it's done so again this year, promoting several brands including scuba gear maker Cressi, health tech company Withings and fashion brand Vivienne Westwood. It's unclear how much revenue the day generated for Amazon.cn last year, because the company doesn't break out sales figures by region.
For Alibaba, last year's holiday translated into $5.75 billion in sales, breaking the previous year's record of $3.14 billion. It dwarfs the US's biggest online shopping day, Cyber Monday, which reached $1.46 billion in sales in 2013.
Now Alibaba has decided to take its 11.11 promotions worldwide, highlighting global brands including online jewelry store Blue Nile and clothing brand Juicy Couture. Even Costco is on board. The US-based bulk discount retailer joined Tmall in October and is promising five-day international shipping for 11.11.
"It's something that could be pretty easily promoted" in the US, said Towns. "As more people here wait to get married and get more settled into their careers and their independent lives, there's an opportunity to counter, say, Valentine's Day."

Apec summit: China and Japan in ice-breaker talks


The body language of the two leaders did not suggest they were comfortable

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The leaders of China and Japan have met for formal talks after more than two years of severe tension over a territorial dispute.
Chinese President Xi Jinping and Japanese PM Shinzo Abe met on the sidelines of the Asia-Pacific Economic Co-operation (Apec) summit in Beijing.
Their first meeting included a public handshake with little sign of warmth.
In a speech to Apec, President Obama has meanwhile announced big changes to visa arrangements with China.
Multiple entry short-term visas for businessmen and tourists will be extended to 10 years - up from one year.
Those for students rise from one year to five.
Mr Obama also stressed the importance of ties between China and the US, saying "the US welcomes the rise of a prosperous, peaceful and stable China."
His comments come amid underlying tension between the US and China over Beijing's growing regional influence.
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For President Xi Jinping, making China strong is a national priority, as Carrie Gracie explains
Analysis: Carrie Gracie, BBC China editor
After two years of Chinese animosity towards Japan's new prime minister, President Xi has finally relented.
Today's face-to-face meeting with Shinzo Abe is important progress in relations between the world's second and third largest economies.
But the underlying disagreements over territory and history remain as bitter as ever. And even Mr Xi's body language at today's meeting was calculatedly icy.
During the handshake he did not smile or respond to Mr Abe's attempt at conversation.
For all the fireworks and group photographs, this summit brings together neighbours with different worldviews at a difficult moment in history.
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Awkward
Relations between China and Japan have long been soured by a row over islands in the East China Sea.
The uninhabited but strategically important islands, known as Diaoyu by China and Senkaku by Japan, are controlled by Japan but also claimed by China.
Tokyo's decision to purchase three of them from their private Japanese owner in September 2012 led to an escalation in a dispute that has rumbled quietly for years.
Leaders at the Apec summit in Beijing, 10 November 2014Trade is at the heart of the two-day summit
The Chinese and Japanese leaders interacted awkwardly as they posed for an unsmiling photo after their talks.
Mr Abe said the meeting - which came three days after the two sides agreed to work to prevent the territorial dispute from escalating - was "the first step for improving ties by returning to mutually beneficial relations based on common strategic interests".
He also said they had agreed to start preparations to establish a maritime crisis mechanism.
There have been fears that a clash - accidental or otherwise - between Chinese and Japanese paramilitary vessels patrolling waters around the disputed islands could trigger a conflict.
Mr Xi told Mr Abe that China hoped Japan would follow a path of peaceful development and adopt prudent military and security policies.
Relations have also been hampered by what China sees as Japan's failure to adequately acknowledge its war-time conduct.
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The Islands
Rupert Wingfield-Hayes looks at the dispute over the islands
  • The eight uninhabited islands and rocks have a total area of about 7 sq km
  • They are close to strategically important shipping lanes - the waters also offer rich fishing grounds and are thought to contain oil deposits
  • The islands are controlled by Japan
  • China says they have been part of its territory since ancient times
  • Separately, Taiwan also claims the islands
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Leaders from the 21 Apec member-nations are in Beijing for two days of talks.
Apec, which includes 21 Pacific Rim nations, includes 40% of the world's population, with member countries accounting for about 44% of global trade and more than half of global economic output.
The summit takes place as China looks to underline its growing status as regional leader and economic giant.
It is the biggest event hosted so far by Mr Xi, who took over the Chinese presidency in March 2013, and trade is one of the top priorities.
The BBC's Martin Patience was blocked from visiting dissident Hu Jia in Beijing
In other summit developments:
  • China and South Korea have agreed to sign a bilateral free-trade deal which will remove or reduce most barriers to trade and investment between the two countries
  • Ahead of the summit Russia and China signed a major gas deal, pledging greater "mutually fruitful co-operation"
  • Beijing has also pledged $40bn (£25.2bn) to help Asian nations improve trade links
  • Australian PM Tony Abbott is to seek a "robust conversation" with Russia's President Vladimir Putin over the Malaysia Airlines plane brought down over Ukraine.