China Daily (Hong Kong)

Domestic tech giants are venturing overseas

Chinese companies enhance presence in cloud service sector with new centers

- By HE WEI in Shanghai hewei@chinadaily.com.cn

Chinese tech giants are deploying their cloud services overseas, and moving up the sector’s global rankings as they do so.

According to Charlie Dai, principal analyst at consultanc­y Forrester, there are two key drivers behind their bid to tap into global markets — to better serve Chinese customers’ globalizat­ion strategies and to extend their own digital territorie­s.

“They could replicate their Chinese market successes in global regions, just as Amazon Web Service and Microsoft are doing in China,” he said.

According to Gartner Inc research director Kevin Ji, cloud computing is essentiall­y about economies of scale for service providers. Expanding their coverage lowers average costs and pushes forward global infrastruc­ture delivery.

To date, only a handful of Chinese players, including Alibaba Group Holding Ltd, Tencent Holdings Ltd and Huawei Technologi­es Co Ltd, have appeared as emerging forces in a market currently dominated by Western competitor­s led by Amazon.com Inc and Microsoft Corp, he said.

“Only Alibaba Cloud, Tencent Cloud and Huawei Cloud have straightfo­rward globalizat­ion strategies, each with a distinctiv­e approach,” Ji said.

The cloud computing arm of internet conglomera­te Tencent announced in March the opening of four new data centers to enhance its internatio­nal cloud computing presence. The new centers offer a range of solutions including storage, cloud security, big data, and artificial intelligen­ce.

Together, they lay the foundation for an integrated cloud service with high speeds and reliable network connectivi­ty for internatio­nal companies looking to scale efficientl­y, the company said.

“Globalizat­ion is an important part of Tencent Cloud’s strategy,” said Qiu Yuepeng, vice-president of Tencent and president of Tencent Cloud.

“By offering our advanced cloud computing infrastruc­ture across the globe, we can not only share Tencent Cloud’s technology and expand our portfolio of industry solutions, but also lower costs and increase efficiency across a variety of industries.”

Data centers, or supporting data nodes, are essential to enabling Chinese companies’ global expansion, which has already become a major driving force in the global economy, Dai said.

“Choosing the same vendor will help simplify the architectu­re and management complexity, and ensure consistent user experience.”

According to Tencent, its new data center in Hong Kong serves as Tencent Cloud’s second financial sector-focused facility in the city. Two new data centers in the United States — in Silicon Valley and Virginia — ensure coverage across the country’s east and west coasts. The fourth new data center, in Mumbai, India, will serve as a core hub for Tencent Cloud in South Asia, boosting its total number of available cloud computing zones to 42.

Alibaba’s cloud computing unit launched its first data center in Indonesia in March, aiming to address the growing demand for reliable and scalable cloud services among the country’s small and mediumsize­d enterprise­s.

The data center underscore­s the company’s commitment to support an Indonesian government­backed initiative to create 1,000 viable startups worth a combined $10 billion by 2020, according to Alibaba Cloud.

Geographic­al proximity and close ties between the two nations provide the company a particular advantage, said Alex Li, general manager of Asia Pacific at Alibaba Cloud.

“We are uniquely positioned with cultural and contextual advantages to provide innovative data-intelligen­ce solutions and computing capabiliti­es to customers across this region,” Li said.

Alibaba Cloud has so far entered in 18 countries and regions. Its latest push saw the company’s cloud services extend to Turkey in April through a partnershi­p with e-Glober, an Istanbul-based business-to-business services provider.

According to Ji, Alibaba is banking on Asia and the Middle East to better tap into the Belt and Road Initiative, whereas Tencent is more closely following the steps of its clients, be it bike-sharing business Mobike, online brokerage platform Futu Securities, or mobile gaming company Supercell.

Meanwhile, Huawei’s strength lies in its ties with leading foreign telecom operators, such as Deutsche Telekom, Orange and Telefonica, helping them to build their public cloud capability using Huawei technology.

Thanks to solid financial and technical backing from home, marching into developed cloud computing markets such as the United States and Europe could help Chinese service providers improve their offerings by catering to more demanding customers, said Neil Wang, president of Frost & Sullivan in China.

“Their competitiv­eness includes cost-efficient services and providing solutions based on their experience serving the world’s most populous nation,” Wang said.

With only a few years of developmen­t, some Chinese companies in the sector have started to climb the global rankings. A Gartner report released last year highlighte­d Alibaba’s high potential, ranking it No 4 globally for “Ability to Execute”, ahead of IBM Corp and Oracle Systems Corp.

“Their strengths are clearly their business insight into existing customers, their competitiv­e pricing strategy and their commitment to profession­al services,” said Dai.

Despite their rapid developmen­t, however, Chinese companies still lack genuine technologi­cal breakthrou­ghs and innovation, meaning they have very little in the way of unique differenti­ation compared with other providers, Ji of Gartner said.

Their competitiv­eness includes costeffici­ent services and providing solutions based on their experience serving the world’s most populous nation.”

Neil Wang,

 ?? A JING / FOR CHINA DAILY ?? Tencent Cloud’s visual big data exchange system is displayed during the 2017 China Internet Conference in Beijing.
A JING / FOR CHINA DAILY Tencent Cloud’s visual big data exchange system is displayed during the 2017 China Internet Conference in Beijing.

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