China Daily

Samsung swears by content to forge rebound in China

- By FAN FEIFEI fanfeifei@chinadaily.com.cn

Samsung Electronic­s Co Ltd announced on Friday it has inked partnershi­p agreements with Chinese content providers and developers, to speed up its localizati­on in the Chinese market amid mounting competitio­n from local rivals.

The company will join hands with content providers such as internet giant Tencent’s online video service platform v.qq.com, videostrea­ming site iQiyi.com, online news aggregator Toutiao and the country’s largest online travel agency Ctrip.

The South Korean chaebol announced its move at its firstever developer conference in China. Wang Tong, president of Samsung’s product strategy and R&D in China, said the company will increase investment in R&D related to artificial intelligen­ce, the internet of things and pre-5G mobile telecom technology.

“There are a large number of Chinese developers and we see huge potential here. China is one of the most important markets for us around the world, so we pay much attention to closer cooperatio­n with local content providers and developers,” said Chen Liren, vice-president of Samsung’s content strategy department in China.

Chen added that Samsung Pay, a mobile payments tool, has partnered with Alibaba’s mobile wallet app Alipay and UnionPay’s built-in QuickPass. It will include financial services and utility bills in its mobile payment tool in the future.

The strategy is Samsung’s response to its sagging fortunes in the China market.

In March, it unveiled its flagship smartphone­s Galaxy S8 and S8+, aiming to restore consumer confidence and rejuvenate sluggish sales affected by the battery fiasco related to its Galaxy Note7 smartphone last year.

However, the company still faces fierce competitio­n from local smartphone players such as Huawei Technologi­es Co, which launched its P10 and P10 Plus models with enviable features, Oppo Electronic­s Corp and Vivo Mobile Communicat­ion Technology Co Ltd, all of which have been steadily increasing their market share.

A report from Counterpoi­nt Technology Market Research said Samsung sold only 3.5 million smartphone­s in China in the first quarter of this year, down 60 percent from 8.7 million units sold in the same period last year.

The market share of Samsung in China has shrunk to 3.3 percent from 8.6 percent last year, slipping to sixth place behind its Chinese competitor­s and Apple.

Roger Sheng, research director at consultanc­y Gartner Inc, said, “The shipment of Samsung’s smartphone­s has witnessed a decline in China as the domestic vendors have stepped up efforts to launch a series of high-quality smartphone­s and expand offline stores.”

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