Life Week and China News Week look like the American Newsweek, Read looks a Chinese version of The New Yorker, China Business News copied the Wall Street Journal's colors, layout and style of illustration, The Economic Observer copied the Financial Times' famous pink paper and section divisions, et cetera et cetera.
So it is a joy to find a new Chinese magazine that is original, both in terms of design and content: Modern Media's City Magazine (生活). The first issue just hit the bookstores and magazine stands in airports and hotels: it will not be sold in regular magazine stands on the streets.
Weighing in at about 2 kilograms, the large format magazine is as big as a coffee table book and looks a little like one, with clean design, full page photographs, and articles laid out for serious reading at a table rather than browsing in a taxi or in the dentist's waiting room.
The first issue contains articles about Kazakh shepherds in Xinjiang, Danish design, the British artist Giles Dawe, meditation retreats in Kathmandu, urban life, a photographic fashion spread, growing up in Hong Kong in the 1960s and 70s, silver craftsmanship and a range of other cultural and lifestyle subjects.
The magazine has a music director -- Tan Dun, China's most famous contemporary composer -- and the first issue contains a CD of his work. There is also a director of visual arts -- Xu Bing, the New York resident recipient of a MacArthur Genius Award. The calligraphy on the front cover is by Xu Bing: it's a fake Chinese character composed of the letters that make up the English word 'aspiration'.
City Magazine bears the same English name as the Hong Kong glossy 号外, which was recently acquired by Modern Media, but although the size of the magazine is similar, the contents are completely different.
It retails for 50 yuan. According to Danwei sources, the print run of the first issue is 100,000. It will be interesting to see how it sells.
昨天回的北京,一下飞机就被孬蛋接去吃了蕉叶。不止一次带着行李出席饭局了,昨天的行程排的尤其满,吃饭之后还要火速将行李放回家再去赶迎接黄BIU出访北京的酒吧活动。孬蛋同学的敬业精神太崇高了,无私的结账之后便低调的消失于茫茫的夜幕中。
黄BIU来北京对于我来说是大事,我们多忙都要去见她一面。当我到达酒吧的时候,发现昏黄的灯光下一伙人神情严肃、低眉顺眼的将头聚在一起正在认真的倾听着什么。中间,一位浑身散发着超BIU小宇宙光环的人眉头紧缩,时而凝思时而释然,目光如炬的看着大家用低沉的语调讲述着什么。我必恭必敬的走上前去,庄BIU兴奋的拉着我指着中间的那位智者介绍:“这位是B老师。”
噢!原来是名号响当当的B老师!B老师是心理专家兼职算命大师,和庄BIU一起定期给男女青年排疑解惑,由于长期的合作关系,两人已经形成了江湖上无怨不摧的……‘庄B二人组’。B老师慈祥的冲我微笑了一下,立刻全身心投入了给人讲解命理悬疑的大业中。B老师从下午两点开始,已经兢兢业业工作很久了,虽然嗓子已经有些沙哑,但是只要有一杯热水,B老师绝不说累。
庄BIU强烈建议B老师也给....
Global Voices Online的第二届年会即将于明天上午在伦敦的路透社中心召开,包括Owen和Issac等在内,都将参加这个来自全球的Blogger的别具一格的会议。
会议的图片可以在Flickr的Globalvoices的Tag上找到,将会有Live Audio Cast和IRC Chat。像我们的网志年会一样,热心人Angelo Embuldeniya将会设立一个专门的Blog,来做文字直播。
China's Rising Advertising and Media Industries
And Why Western Companies Need to Invest More Human Capital in Them
By Didier Guérin
It is one of the great ironies of modern marketing: The major marketers have had to virtually bully their agencies and media into matching their presence in China. Now that the prize is in sight, something akin to a modern gold rush is developing, with agencies and media desperate to stake their claims.
China is no easy game. Many companies, initially attracted by the low cost of labor in China, actually failed because of the lack of local management. Ten years ago, most companies that were opening a branch in China had to rely on their long-term vision of the market without clear visibility of their return on investment. Eventually, these pioneers found a way to develop local talents; the dividends are now starting to flow.
Agencies and media
Meanwhile, agencies and media kept perpetuating a culture of nervous caution and failed to match the development of their clients and advertisers. In a country where the sales of many products have been enjoying double-digit growth for several years, the marketers are now frustrated. They are struggling to find the vehicles and services they need to market their brands and products.
The key next step -- especially for media companies -- will be to take a leap of faith and start investing human capital in their China ventures. The potential rewards call for bold moves. While China is building an economy that will be bigger than Japan by 2020, the Chinese advertising and media industries should become the second largest in the world within 10 years.
Hence, missing the boat starts today.
Market statistics
The modern facts and statistics of the China market make compelling reading. It is well known that China manufactures 70% of all the toys sold in the world, 60% of the world’s bicycles and 50% of the world’s microwave ovens.
And China’s interdependence with the rest of the world is increasing. By the end of 2006, Wal-Mart plans to build another 42 stores in China to reach 90 outlets. Meantime, the world’s largest retailer will buy this year more than $18 billion worth of goods from China. Wal-Mart needs China to fit its image of the “can’t beat” prices retailer, and China needs Wal-Mart to distribute its growing production of unbranded products.
To succeed in China, Wal-Mart had to expand its model and bring not only good ideas and cash but also its human capital to develop its local business. It took time and money. Advertising agencies and media companies, which did little but complain about the lack of “good people” in China, are finding themselves in a development gap with their clients and advertisers. China’s media industry is still in its infancy, while marketers such as Cartier, L’Oréal and Nike have established a solid presence to ensure their brands do not miss out on the China opportunity. Like Wal-Mart, these marketers have brought to China not only their brands and products, but human capital with their strategy and executives.
New disposable income
With an average 9.5% growth experienced during the last 25 years, a new disposable income has come to the pockets of most of its 1.3 billion population, creating a group of several hundred million demanding consumers, already known to be brand loyal. The GDP growth has fueled phenomenal advertising spending expansion. ZenithOptimedia’s recent Advertising Expenditure Forecasts tips China’s advertising industry to reach $10.4 billion in 2005, or five times the size of the market 10 years ago. By 2007, it should reach $14 billion (in constant prices) and become the fifth-largest advertising market.
Several advertising agencies and marketing services companies have followed their clients to China, especially the Japanese agencies of Dentsu and Hakuhodo, but their American and European colleagues have been much slower. The complex Chinese regulatory environment has been blamed as the major barrier to entry. This remains true but the situation is changing. After becoming a member of the World Trade Organization, China has gradually opened its market, and since December 2003 foreign companies are now free to be the majority partner in a Chinese advertising agency (wholly owned agencies will be allowed at the end of this year).
China's booming print media
The media industry has a similar attitude. The breakdown of advertising spending in China shows that print media has taken the lion’s share of advertising growth. Chinese newspapers have become the largest recipients of advertising spending with a current market share of about 42% among all media. And while outdoor and Internet advertising are expanding quickly, China’s magazine industry has been the big winner of the advertising market’s redistribution of media spending. Although smaller in volume, advertising spending in Chinese magazines has been growing about twice as fast as the rest of the market and, just in the last two years, has doubled in size (+100.3%). As more and better magazines are coming to the market, this trend is expected to continue at a rate of 30% over the next few years from the current -- and still modest -- ad spending of about $400 million in 2004. If we take ZenithOptimedia’s current expenditure and make projections based on the growth rate expected next year, China’s magazine industry will become the second largest ad-spending market in the world by 2014.
As in the rest of the world, Chinese marketers are finding magazines more relevant, in terms of price, market segmentation and the ability to deliver a desirable audience. But China’s media industry suffers from a serious lack of local qualified executives. Training, or sharing media expertise by Westerners, is the key to success. Yet, most publishers still consider licensing income as pleasant marginal profit and avoid the small investment needed to educate and guide the people who will create their magazine each month.
The Middle Kingdom’s media is coming out of the Middle Age. In order to take the next step, China needs the human capital that Western media companies have. This is a highly valuable asset that it can exchange for a position in what will become the second-largest media market in the world within the next 10 years. This opportunity will not last forever.
Contact sirena@mediaconv.com for more information.
When we launched the initial beta of Virtual Earth in the summer, we talked about how we are set to create an immersive experience in local search and mapping. During the last couple of months, we got great deal of feedback from you suggesting new features and sending us bugs – so thank you for your support! Now, we are back with new and exciting features (and don't just take our word for it, both Michael Arrington and Charlene Li have reviews) to our latest release of Virtual Earth! With this release, Virtual Earth is now part of the Windows Live Family and can be found at http://local.live.com.
With Windows Live Local, you get all that you had with Virtual Earth and the following new and exciting features:
Stunning Bird’s Eye Imagery: Now you can see 45-degree bird's-eye view of major U.S. cities that include Boston, Las Vegas, Los Angeles, New York, San Francisco, and Seattle. This feature also gives you a 360-degree panoramic view of the 45-degree angle scenes of your favorite cities! Like this one and the ones posted on the Virtual Earth team blog.
Custom Pushpins: The Windows Live Local map is now right-click enabled! You can right-click on any place and add your own Pushpin – think of writing a note about where you live and send it off to your friends or imagine pin-pointing a location along side a street indicating where you need to be picked up by your friend – now you can do all that!
Driving Directions: Regular Driving directions with highly customizable printing experience; don’t forget that you can right-click on the map to set origin or destination – no need to know an address to get directions anymore!
Improved and easy-to-use user interface: Tons of updates to the zoom control, pan control, bird’s eye view indicator and so on to help you navigate Windows Live Local better!
If you are a developer – you should move your mashups to the libraries that mentioned in my previous post as soon as possible – and if you are curious about using the latest map control with the current release, stay tuned, I will have more details on my developer blog.
Finally, despite the domain change from virtualearth to live.com, your old permalinks should just work fine with the new http://local.live.com site.
If you are looking for more information on features, tips and tricks and more, check back on Virtual Earth team blog often!
Chandu Thota
SDE Lead, Virtual Earth
On behalf of the Virtual Earth and MapPoint team