China Daily (Hong Kong)

China’s rural folk ride the $3b app

- By FAN FEIFEI Fanfeifei@chinadaily.com.cn

Kuaishou, a Chinese video sharing and live streaming app, has become popular among China’s rural population as it brings them closer by allowing them to record and share their lives.

What makes Kuaishou distinct is its focus on ordinary people, not glamorous celebritie­s and stars who abound on mainstream short video and live streaming apps.

“The number of daily active users of Kuaishou has surpassed 40 million, creating millions of short videos via the UGC (user generated content) method,” said Su Hua, its founder and CEO.

The next goal is to encourage rural folk to record and share lighter-vein videos.

For any social networking app, the key is daily active users. Considerin­g the success of Instagram, Su believes there is still great potential for growing the number of daily active users of Kuaishou.

The APP is popular even in urban centers. Daily active users in first-tier cities such as Beijing, Shanghai, Guangzhou and Shenzhen number 10 million.

The number of daily active users of Kuaishou has surpassed 40 million ...” Su Hua, Kuaishou’s founder and CEO.

Stated differentl­y, 30 million users, or more than 70 percent of users, come from outside first-tier cities.

And 87 percent of Kuaishou’s users are from the post-’90s generation or the so-called millennial­s. “We are devoted to recording the daily life of ordinary people, giving them a stage to express themselves,” said Su, adding the app aims to improve the user experience and attract more new users.

The app would recommend personaliz­ed content to users based on their browsing history and preference­s with the help of artificial intelligen­ce technology and a sophistica­ted algorithm. “We also pay attention to data confidenti­ality and user security,” Su said.

Kuaishou was establishe­d over six years ago. The company is now exploring ways of monetizing its assets (user traffic). It believes online virtual tools, gifts, video advertisem­ents, e-commerce, games and other value-added services could prove moneyspinn­ers.

Su said Kuaishou’s ultimate goal, however, is not to commercial­ize the platform totally. “However, excellent commercial­ization programs will make us strengthen team building, hire more talent, and optimize our products.”

In March, Kuaishou received 350 million yuan ($1.1 million) in financing. The funding round was led by Chinese internet giant Tencent Holdings Ltd. Last year, it received funding from internet search giant Baidu Inc and Sequoia Capital. Their invest-

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