The Phnom Penh Post

Airbnb rivals in China hold hands in a nervous market

- Amie Tsang and Paul Mozur

SUN Huifeng liked the idea of tapping Airbnb or one of its rising local competitor­s to rent out his spare Beijing bedroom. The problem: He didn’t like the idea of a stranger in his house.

“I mainly worry about the quality of guests,” said Sun, 31, a marketer for an informatio­n technology company. “Or, to speak more plainly, I was even worried that some criminals might come.”

Xiaozhu, a Chinese version of Airbnb, swung into action. It ran him through the company’s guest-vetting system, helped him install a password-based lock on the door to his Beijing apartment and provided pink cushions for his sofa. Twice a week, Sun carefully waters the plants Xiaozhu gave him.

Airbnb sees big promise in China, where travel spending reached nearly $500 billion in 2015 thanks to a new generation of domestic tourists. On Wednesday in Shanghai, Airbnb unveiled a new Chinese name – Aibiying, which means “welcome each other with love” – as well as efforts to increase local hiring and deals to draw visitors to Shanghai with offers such as behindthe-scenes visits to the Chinese opera.

“Our mission is to create a world where anyone can belong anywhere,” Brian Chesky, Airbnb’s chief executive, said in Shanghai on Wednesday. “If we are going to achieve our mission of belonging anywhere, anywhere must include China, and anyone must include Chinese travellers.”

But like other global tech firms with an eye on China, Airbnb faces challenges. Chief among them are domestic versions of the site, including Xiaozhu and another rival, Tujia, that offer more local listings.To counter Airbnb’s advantage with cosmopolit­an Chinese who may have used its service in New York, Paris or Tokyo, the competitor­s are taking big steps to educate other sceptical Chinese about renting out – and crashing in – a spare bedroom.

The cultural barriers are significan­t. In a country where a home is for family or for investment and tourism is still relatively new for many, the idea of post- ing homes online for random guests to rent takes some getting used to.

“There is a manager behind every property,” said Kelvin Chen, the chief executive of Xiaozhu. “We still need time to educate our users.”

Airbnb offers the latest gauge of whether an American technology company can make it in a politicall­y and commercial­ly thorny market. The government blocks Google, Facebook and Twitter. Uber and the online arm of Wal-Mart bowed in the face of intense domestic competitio­n and sold their businesses to local rivals.

Perhaps mindful of its regulatory scuffles in the United States and Europe, Airbnb is taking a careful approach in China. It has worked out agreements with Chinese tech giants like Alibaba and Tencent. It has also teamed up with officials in cities like Shanghai to promote tourism.

Crucially, like LinkedIn, another internatio­nal hopeful in China, Airbnb complies with Chinese laws requiring it to keep Chinese data only on domestical­ly based Chinese servers. That could expose it to requests from the Chinese authoritie­s to track any of its users. Last year, Airbnb sent a message to its users in China informing them that data would be stored in the country.

For Airbnb, which has only about 80,000 listings in China, its more than 3 million listings around the world put it in a strong position to cater to the millions of Chinese who travel overseas each year. It also has outreach efforts, like informatio­nal events for hosts and occasional promotions offering free photograph­y for hosts with apartments they want to rent out.

Local rivals are going further to teach sceptical Chinese how to be good hosts and good guests. That helps in a country where horror stories of trashed rooms and bad traveller behaviour abound.

Natasia Guo, a longtime Airbnb host and entreprene­ur in China, said most visitors tended to be younger, while the odd middle-aged guest did not seem to understand how the service was supposed to work. Of one 40-year-old guest, she said: “He treated my place like a hotel. And the reason I say that is he started smoking in the room.”

Xiaozhu, which has about 140,000 listings, seeks to reassure hosts against such problems. It also works with the internet censorship department and the public security bureau, which helps weed out users with a criminal record. For the benefit of guests, it offers its own cleaning services as well as training events to teach hosts how to get along with customers and decorate homes.

Sun, who received the pink cushions from Xiaozhu, said he had also come to enjoy the company of his guests and the income he received from them, which totals about $300 to $600 a month. One was a Sichuan cook brimming with gossip about the entertainm­ent business. Another played mah-jongg.

“Mah-jongg is my hobby,” he said. “If the guests want to play mah-jongg, I get pretty excited.”

 ?? GIULIA MARCHI/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Sun Huifeng (right), who rents out a room in his apartment, plays mah-jongg in Beijing on March 11.
GIULIA MARCHI/THE NEW YORK TIMES Sun Huifeng (right), who rents out a room in his apartment, plays mah-jongg in Beijing on March 11.

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