Bangkok Post

Airbnb embarks on China drive with local name

- FENG CAI BLOOMBERG

SHANGHAI: Airbnb Inc is showing China some love.

The US home-sharing giant is adopting the name “Aibiying” in China, one that translates as “welcome each other with love,” as it doubles investment in the country and triples its local workforce to serve the world’s largest population of travellers.

“The start-up intends to ramp up its Chinese business after more than doubling listings in the country to about 80,000 in 2016,’’ chief executive Brian Chesky said.

This year, it plans to offer customers in Shanghai its fledgling Airbnb Trips service — a menu of options that can include concert tickets and restaurant reservatio­ns.

It’ll begin to market “Experience­s,” a feature that will let visitors to the eastern Chinese city book local-led excursions — including going behind the scenes of a traditiona­l folk opera and learning about dough figurines.

“There’s a whole new generation of Chinese travellers who want to see the world in a different way,” Chesky told a news briefing in Shanghai. “We hope that Aibiying and our Trips product inspires them to want to travel in a way that opens doors to new people, communitie­s and neighbourh­oods across the world.”

Airbnb, last valued at more than $30 billion, is accelerati­ng its drive into Asia after recently turning profitable for the first time, according to people close to the company.

Since its start in 2008, the company has raised more than $3 billion to pursue its goal of becoming a full-service travel company and expand its business around the world.

While Airbnb’s establishe­d in Asian markets such as Japan, it’s made slower gains in China. The country is dominated by local rivals almost two years after Chesky told Bloomberg News he was “getting really serious” about getting in.

Still, it’s a market of 300 million millennial­s starting to explore solo travel that co-founder Joe Gebbia has described as “on fire.” Chesky said yesterday that Airbnb’s total Chinese guests jumped 146% in 2016.

“They don’t want tour buses. They don’t want tour packages. They don’t want tourist areas. Instead they want local experience­s,” Gebbia said in an interview last week. “It couldn’t be more exciting to think about this wave of Chinese millennial­s that are starting to earn incomes now.”

Airbnb has taken its time building relationsh­ips with Chinese movers and shakers — it still hasn’t named a local CEO.

A 2014 partnershi­p with Alibaba Group Holding Ltd made it easy for Chinese users to pay for Airbnb rentals with Alipay, the local equivalent of PayPal. A tie-up with Tencent Holdings Ltd got Airbnb built into WeChat, by far China’s dominant messaging app.

Last year, Airbnb teamed up with the government­s of four major cities, including Shanghai and tech hub Shenzhen, for tourism promotions.

Hooking up with the government could help the start-up head off the sorts of clashes that have taken place with local officials from New York and Barcelona to its own home-town of San Francisco.

But any move within China pits Airbnb against local leader Tujia, which lists more than 450,000 homes and is constantly adding more. Its backers include Ctrip.com Internatio­nal Ltd — the world’s second largest online travel agency — and HomeAway Inc.

Tujia’s edge stems in part from its understand­ing of the needs of Chinese travelers: it provides services from property management and inspection­s of listings to cleanups after guests leave.

Airbnb however has the advantage of being able to offer more extensive global accommodat­ion to a growing wave of internatio­nal vacationer­s.

The company estimates outbound travel from China grew 142% last year, and that it’s served more than 5.3 million of the country’s globe-trotters.

“China remains crucial to fulfilling Airbnb’s goal of connecting people around the world,’’ Chesky said. “That must start with the biggest country on earth, right here.”

 ?? REUTERS ?? Airbnb co-founder and CEO Brian Chesky speaks at an event to launch the brand’s Chinese name in Shanghai yesterday.
REUTERS Airbnb co-founder and CEO Brian Chesky speaks at an event to launch the brand’s Chinese name in Shanghai yesterday.

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