Podcasts about jinri toutiao

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Best podcasts about jinri toutiao

Latest podcast episodes about jinri toutiao

Asie et Innovations
Comment ByteDance veut remplacer les parents par une lampe intelligente

Asie et Innovations

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 11, 2021 13:37


L'éducation est un secteur qui aiguise les appétits de bien des acteurs, y compris ceux que l'on attendrait pas. L'un de ceux qui surprend le plus est ByteDance, le propriétaire de TikTok qui est un acteur très actif sur le sujet. Il s'agit pourtant d'un mouvement stratégique majeur pour cette société qui est tranquillement  en train de changer le monde, vraiment. Et pour ce faire, la société se lance dans le matériel éducatif, une petite révolution pour elle. Le sommaire et les extraits sont ici : https://bit.ly/3rJnsD8 Dans cet épisode, vous apprendrez : Ce qu'est la Edtech ? Qu'est ce que Dali dans l'écosystème ByteDance et quel est son poids ? Qu'est ce que la lampe intelligente de tutorat de Bytedance Pourquoi l'entrée de ByteDance dans le matériel connecté est un choix stratégique très fort Comment ByteDance valorise son patrimoine humain même en cas d'échec Quelles sont les fonctionnalités clés de la Dali Smart Work ? Et quelles sont les critiques  et les sujets d'inquiétudes ? Vous saurez aussi si elle est une réussite commerciale ? Quels sont les grands chiffres de l'éducation online en Chine ? et du matériel éducatif ? Quels sont les différents services éducatifs lancés par Bytedance ? Quels investissements ont été consentis par Bytedance pour GoGoKid ? Est ce que cela a marché et déstabilisé VIPKids ? Qu'est ce que l'application de connaissance HaoHao XueXi ? Pourquoi c'est une rupture de modèle économique pour ByteDance ? Qu'est ce que les initiatives Hope and Risins, Quing Be, Boxuei et Open Language Qu'est ce que Dali Ketang ? Quel est la stratégie #eduToc promue par Nikhil Gandhi pour carte le marché indien ? Comment Google et Sundar Pichai veulent contrecarrer les plans de TikTok en Inde ? Quelles sont les deux compétences clés de Tiktok pour ce  nouveau marché ? Comment ByteDance s'implique aussi dans le livre audio ? Pourquoi cela aide-t-il à sa rétention ? Pourquoi cela maximise "sa guerre" avec Tencent ?    

Use Case
Did you know this about Bytedance? And other China tech trends with Rui Ma, Techbuzz China

Use Case

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 12, 2020 80:31


🔥🔥🔥BANGER EPISODE ALERT! 🔥🔥🔥The story goes that Bytedance founder Zhang Yiming was super inspired by Steve Jobs. So much so that the name Bytedance was derived from Jobs’ philosophy for matching technology (byte) with art (dance). Rui Ma, who is one of THE MOST RESPECTED voices on tech in China, and the host of the popular Techbuzz China podcast, doesn’t buy that fully. But then again, no one today claims to believe everything that is said by startup PR teams- except maybe the founders themselves. So to find a balanced, extremely informative and nuanced perspective on what is obviously the most valuable startup in the world - is something I highly highly recommend. Trust me, this is a killer one! 🕵Rui Ma has been an investor across Silicon Valley and China, advised multiple startups and is soon coming out with a book on Bytedance - using multiple sources that never make it to the English media. She presently lives in Redwood City working across the US and China and her dog makes a special appearance towards the end on the show (so, I guess we had 2 guests on the show this time?!)Check out the timestamps from this episode and tell me you don’t want to listen to this! I’ve highlighted my favorite parts with 🔥You could listen to the audio file you above or on your favorite podcasting app. Please do give us a review on your favorite podcast app! 🙏TIMESTAMPS:00:00- Some Chinese rap songs, why are all Chinese Tech CEO’s “Ma”, Rui’s journey from investing to podcasting herself, why people either love or absolutely hate China 07:23- Why Bytedance capturing US-China is such a big deal, breaking down some misconceptions about Bytedance14:00- The birth of Jinri Toutiao, Bytedance-Meituan connection, the early boom days of China tech, How is Bytedance different from Tencent- a cultural difference? Acquisitions vs internal innovation, internal product testing 🔥🔥🔥Subscribe to the Turnaround newsletter to get more such content to your inbox:25:00- 996 of course, engineering culture in China and Silicon Valley29:45- How much do Chinese tech firms imitate SV firms? Zhang Yiming’s inspirations from Amazon, Google, Facebook and even Nike! 37:00- Being in the media industry, how much does the Propaganda department in China care about major Chinese tech players, moderating content in China 🔥🔥🔥41:52- Bytedance’s international expansions, a new approach to internationalization after Kevin Mayer as new Tiktok CEO, Beijing driving strategies for India47:00- LIVESTREAMING, China’s rural-urban divide in tech adoption and market opportunities, saturation in new user growth after smartphone growth stopped in 2017-18, monetization strategies for Bytedance 🔥🔥🔥🔥58:50- Advertising on Tiktok vs Facebook, different product purposes and goals1:05:00- The poor quality of China-tech journalism, people don’t have sex with dogs in India and people don’t eat dogs in China 1:12:23- How do Chinese citizens look at privacy? The cultural concept of “Yinsi”🔥🔥🔥🔥1:18:20- Parting thoughts, Rui promises a list of best resources on China-tech Get full access to Turnaround at turnaround.substack.com/subscribe

China, WTF?!
#4 A Day on Chinese Platforms

China, WTF?!

Play Episode Play 60 sec Highlight Listen Later Aug 13, 2019 58:38


Welcome back to the only podcast to ask: China, WTF?! What’s The Future? Arnold Ma, founder of Chinese creative agency Qumin https://qumin.co.uk/, gets to the bottom of what tomorrow may look like, globally, by dissecting China's today. The podcast focuses on Chinese tech disrupters, people and cultures.For Episode 4 Qumin take a journey through time and replace the magic carpet with a phone. Arnold, Sam and Louisa whizz through 24 hours on both a UK and a Chinese phone and pinpoint differences and similarities. They look at user behaviours and habits, as well as the platforms these manifest on. Sam Phillips is Qumin’s Account Director who looks after all the global brands, while Louisa Loehrig takes care of Qumin's marketing.Topics include:3:37 The Chinese Dream vs ‘Generation sensible’ 6:15 Why mobile apps are so powerful in China9:30 Mornings in the UK vs in China12:34 ‘Jinri Toutiao’, Bytedance’s hyper-powered news platform13:19 How WeChat replaced email: The convergence of professional and social spheres16:03 How AI algorithms and interest-driven content feeds cater to heightened user expectations19:01 The commute to work: transport, in-transit entertainment and breakfast 20:42 Omnipresent signal: zero downtime in China23:41 What the fierce competition between Chinese corporations (e.g. Alibaba vs Tencent) means for consumers33:01 The biggest difference between Western and Chinese platforms: Social operating systems34:01 ‘Digital self’: Profiles and online identities in China vs in the West35:27 The importance of desktop in the UK 37:21 Work in the West is doable without a phone, but in China: no phone/no WeChat, no business40:50 The Chinese favour culture42:07 Red envelopes and social currencies connect life and work on WeChat45:29 Ordering a takeaway for lunch in China: Cheap, quick, convenient services enabled through manpower47:01 Saving time and convenience are key with mobile service design in China48:24 The importance of food in China 53:01 The death of TV in China and the rise of mobile short form videos56:50 China’s content marketing is a preview of the futureIf you like this episode, hit subscribe for more and follow 'Qumin' on LinkedIn for the latest updates. You can also watch the show on YouTube: https://youtu.be/avrSGAjOVlw

China Tech Talk
66: The next Facebook will be Chinese

China Tech Talk

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 9, 2018 63:29


Bytedance, formerly known as Jinri Toutiao, is on deck for discussion this week. Beginning from pure textual content and recommendation, Bytedance has seemingly found the key to human attention. While this makes for a great product, and compelling business, whether they can make it in the US market is still unclear.

chinese bytedance jinri toutiao
The Caixin-Sinica Business Brief
The Caixin-Sinica Business Brief, episode 44

The Caixin-Sinica Business Brief

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 16, 2018 16:13


Welcome to the 44th installment of the Caixin-Sinica Business Brief, a weekly podcast that brings you the most important business stories of the week from China's top source for business and financial news. Produced by Kaiser Kuo of our Sinica Podcast, it features a business news roundup, plus conversations with Caixin reporters and editors. This week: We analyze China's trade deficit number in March, which reached nearly $5 billion, marking the first monthly deficit since January 2017. We discuss Xi Jinping's reiterated promises to open up the country's economy to foreign investors at the opening ceremony of the Boao Forum for Asia Annual Conference 2018, saying change would come “as soon as possible.” We learn that a second allegation of sexual misconduct has been leveled against Shen Yang 沈阳, a former professor at Beijing's prestigious Peking University, who was previously accused of raping a student before she committed suicide 20 years ago. We acknowledge long-awaited guidelines by Beijing to allow out-of-towners to apply for full access to the capital's public services. We hear that four popular Chinese news apps, including top news aggregator Jinri Toutiao, have been removed from major mobile app stores — the latest regulatory blow amid the country's tightening scrutiny over online content. We note that a slew of major Chinese social media platforms have swiftly removed content deemed to “violate core socialist values” as authorities tighten their grip on online content. We explore shared-workspace provider WeWork's acquisition of Naked Hub, one of its China-based rivals. We delve into Chinese social media giant Tencent's ambition in the burgeoning Wi-Fi business on China's fast-running bullet trains in hopes of extending its access to the massive data of urban travelers. In addition, we talk with Joshua Drummer, editor at Caixin Global, about AI-powered robots and banking. We also chat with Doug Young, managing editor of Caixin Global, about Didi Chuxing, one of China's big internet companies, and its expansion outside of China. We'd love to hear your feedback on this product. Please send any comments and suggestions to sinica@supchina.com.  

The Caixin-Sinica Business Brief
The Caixin-Sinica Business Brief, episode 37

The Caixin-Sinica Business Brief

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 5, 2018 14:55


Welcome to the 37th installment of the Caixin-Sinica Business Brief, a weekly podcast that brings you the most important business stories of the week from China's top source for business and financial news. Produced by Kaiser Kuo of our Sinica Podcast, it features a business news roundup, plus conversations with Caixin reporters and editors. This week, we learn about a man in China who was awarded 1.9 million yuan ($301,796) in compensation last week after being wrongfully convicted of molesting dozens of women last year. We explore some new data released by the China Internet Network Information Center (CNNIC), which suggests that the country had 772 million internet users by the end of 2017 and that 97.5 percent of them used mobile phones to surf the web. We hear about the news that Hong Kong's legislature has voted to completely end the city's ivory trade by 2021, weeks after the Chinese mainland's ban took effect in January. On the topic of Hong Kong, we also note that the city's property market is on fire, and it's only expected to get hotter. We hear good news from Xiaomi that sales for the smartphone maker surged in last year's fourth quarter as the company extended its comeback. We cover some environmental protection workers in Hunan Province who were found to be using mist cannons to water down pollution readings in two recent cases. In addition, we chat with Caixin Global reporter Coco Feng about the latest in livestreaming — a game that people are playing for cash prizes that's really giving a jolt to livestream sites. We also talk with Doug Young, managing editor of Caixin Global, about Alibaba Group Holding's announcement to purchase a 33 percent stake in fintech affiliate Ant Financial Services Group, and Baidu, which has been sued by news aggregator Jinri Toutiao for unfair competition as the pair's battle for advertising market share intensifies. We'd love to hear your feedback on this product. Please send any comments and suggestions to sinica@supchina.com.  

Evolving for the Next Billion by GGV Capital
Liu Zhen on Bytedance’s Global Vision and Why Toutiao Is Unique

Evolving for the Next Billion by GGV Capital

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 16, 2018 59:28


GGV Capital’s Hans Tung and Zara Zhang interview Liu Zhen, the senior vice president of Bytedance (Toutiao), one of the fastest-growing Chinese tech startups that has made a lot of headlines. You may know Bytedance through its flagship product, Jinri Toutiao (今日头条), a content discovery and recommendation mobile app platform that uses artificial intelligence to recommend content to its users. What you may be less familiar with is that Bytedance also owns some of the most popular short video apps in China, and has demonstrated its global vision with its recent merger with Musical.ly, a top-ranking short video app in many countries with hundreds of millions of users, and a GGV portfolio company. Prior to Bytedance, Liu Zhen led Uber’s China team before it was acquired by Didi Chuxing (a GGV portfolio company) in 2016.   With a background that includes being a lawyer in Silicon Valley, helping Uber scale in China, and spearheading Bytedance’s global expansion, Zhen has had unique experiences that inform her views on the tech ecosystem in China and the U.S. Join our listeners' community via WeChat/Slack at 996.ggvc.com/community. GGV Capital also produces a biweekly email newsletter in English, also called "996," which has a roundup of the week's most important happenings in tech in China. Subscribe at 996.ggvc.com. The 996 Podcast is brought to you by GGV Capital, a multi-stage venture capital firm based in Silicon Valley, Shanghai, and Beijing. We have been partnering with leading technology entrepreneurs for the past 18 years from seed to pre-IPO. With $3.8 billion in capital under management across eight funds, GGV invests in globally minded entrepreneurs in consumer internet, e-commerce, frontier tech, and enterprise. GGV has invested in over 280 companies, with 30 companies valued at over $1 billion. Portfolio companies include Airbnb, Alibaba, Bytedance (Toutiao), Ctrip, Didi Chuxing, DOMO, Hashicorp, Hellobike, Houzz, Keep, Musical.ly, Slack, Square, Wish, Xiaohongshu, YY, and others. Find out more at ggvc.com.

Evolving for the Next Billion by GGV Capital
Liu Zhen on Bytedance's Global Vision and Why Toutiao Is Unique

Evolving for the Next Billion by GGV Capital

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 16, 2018 59:28


GGV Capital's Hans Tung and Zara Zhang interview Liu Zhen, the senior vice president of Bytedance (Toutiao), one of the fastest-growing Chinese tech startups that has made a lot of headlines. You may know Bytedance through its flagship product, Jinri Toutiao (今日头条), a content discovery and recommendation mobile app platform that uses artificial intelligence to recommend content to its users. What you may be less familiar with is that Bytedance also owns some of the most popular short video apps in China, and has demonstrated its global vision with its recent merger with Musical.ly, a top-ranking short video app in many countries with hundreds of millions of users, and a GGV portfolio company. Prior to Bytedance, Liu Zhen led Uber's China team before it was acquired by Didi Chuxing (a GGV portfolio company) in 2016.   With a background that includes being a lawyer in Silicon Valley, helping Uber scale in China, and spearheading Bytedance's global expansion, Zhen has had unique experiences that inform her views on the tech ecosystem in China and the U.S. Join our listeners' community via WeChat/Slack at 996.ggvc.com/community. GGV Capital also produces a biweekly email newsletter in English, also called "996," which has a roundup of the week's most important happenings in tech in China. Subscribe at 996.ggvc.com. The 996 Podcast is brought to you by GGV Capital, a multi-stage venture capital firm based in Silicon Valley, Shanghai, and Beijing. We have been partnering with leading technology entrepreneurs for the past 18 years from seed to pre-IPO. With $3.8 billion in capital under management across eight funds, GGV invests in globally minded entrepreneurs in consumer internet, e-commerce, frontier tech, and enterprise. GGV has invested in over 280 companies, with 30 companies valued at over $1 billion. Portfolio companies include Airbnb, Alibaba, Bytedance (Toutiao), Ctrip, Didi Chuxing, DOMO, Hashicorp, Hellobike, Houzz, Keep, Musical.ly, Slack, Square, Wish, Xiaohongshu, YY, and others. Find out more at ggvc.com.

China Tech Talk
19: China's $20 billion news app with Dannie Li

China Tech Talk

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 30, 2017 42:04


This week Matt and John talk with Dannie Li, an analyst at China Tech Insights about Jinri Toutiao, a Chinese content aggregator recently valued at $20 billion, including:  Why Jinri Toutiao is so popular How it is so sticky Its business model and why its valuation is high Why advertisers love it so much Risks to the app and business model Conflicts between Toutiao and content producers Challenges as Toutiao expands inside and outside China