Google Won't Have Easy Ride Back Into China

Advertisement
By Reuters | Updated: 10 September 2015 12:27 IST
Google Inc CEO Sundar Pichai has made no secret that he wants to get back into China via Google Play, the app store for its Android mobile operating system.

But it's unlikely to be a smooth ride.

Google largely pulled its services out of China five years ago after refusing to continue self-censoring its search results. Since then, it has maintained a limited presence in the world's biggest Internet market, but most of its services, including Play, have been rendered borderline inaccessible.

"Google needs to be in China, period," says Andy Tian, CEO of Asia Innovations, a Chinese app developer and former Google executive. "Once in China, they can expand into other services. They need a beachhead, and the beachhead is Google Play."

Advertisement

Google declined to comment on reports it plans to ramp up its Play store in China this year. Instead, it pointed to comments Pichai has made about exploring how to bring Google Play to China.

But Tian and others say Google has lost basically all ground in most of its major services, especially search and video streaming, to Chinese players such as Internet giants Baidu, Tencent, Alibaba and Qihoo 360. All have built their own products and services to replace or even surpass Google's offerings.

In China and elsewhere in Asia, the centres of gravity in mobile have shifted away from app stores as the point of control to applications like messaging, which act as gateways for third parties to provide services.

Advertisement

Tencent's WeChat, a messaging app originally similar to WhatsApp, has become a digital Swiss army knife, allowing its 600 million monthly active users to play games, book cabs and make payments, among many other things.

Too big to ignore
But China is too big a market for Google to ignore. Apple Inc complies with local laws and made $13.2 billion (roughly Rs. 87,949 crores) last quarter in Greater China, which includes the mainland, Hong Kong and Taiwan, making it its second-biggest market.

Advertisement

Some in the industry doubt whether Google can use the Play store to help get its other services into China as domestic rivals are now well established and Google would have to comply with Chinese law. That would mean storing all data in China, and meeting information access and censorship requests, a thorny issue, particularly if the US government gets involved.

Others say focusing on Google Play may make things easier. Chris MacDonald, a business ethics expert at Ryerson University in Torontowho oversaw a case study about Google's operations in China while at Duke University, says Chinese regulators will see Play as less threatening than Search and Gmail, reducing the frequency of government-led probes.

Advertisement

"It's highly unlikely the Chinese government is going to come asking, 'Did anyone download Tetris?'" he said. "If Google doesn't have any highly private information, it can't be asked for highly private information."

Back in the game?
China will this year become the world's largest mobile gaming market by revenue, earning more than $6 billion, says Peter Warman, CEO of Dutch mobile analytics company Newzoo, which analyses data from its Chinese partner TalkingData. Up to 90 percent of money spent on mobile goes to games, he said.

Google Play is available in China, but reaches only 21 million of an estimated 800 million Chinese mobile users, Warman said. The primary app stores of Internet giants Qihoo, Tencent and Baidu account for two thirds of the market.

These players are unlikely to give away that advantage.

And handset manufacturers like Huawei and Xiaomi have their own app stores which not only bring in revenue but enable them to control how their devices look and feel, at least in China.

"The fact of the matter is that Google is late to China. Maybe almost too late," says Shiv Putcha, who covers mobile in Asia for IDC, a consultancy.

Indeed, some question whether China needs a single Google-controlled app store.

Rohit Dadwal, Managing Director Asia Pacific at the Mobile Marketing Association (MMA), says his organisation has worked with mobile players and app stores on standards and guidelines that help brands measure the success of their ads, a key source of revenue.

"It's not the Wild West," he said. "It's a diversified, fragmented market, but each niche provides value."

For some local developers having a single market place would be a boon, since it would free them from the restrictions and quirks of app stores. Piracy and malware are problems too: a study by Tsinghua University, Microsoft Research and China's Ministry of Science and Technology found that only a quarter of apps on local app stores are safe.

But, says Tian and others, it would make most sense for foreign developers trying to break into China's market. Of the revenue generated by the top-100 games in China, only a tenth goes to publishers outside China, says Newzoo's Warman.

"If they could pull it off it would be good for the ecosystem, but it's going to be tough," said Adam Morley, Beijing-based product manager for Chinese social app Nice.

"You have a lot of players with skin in the game in a position of power."

© Thomson Reuters 2015

 

For the latest tech news and reviews, follow Gadgets 360 on X, Facebook, WhatsApp, Threads and Google News. For the latest videos on gadgets and tech, subscribe to our YouTube channel. If you want to know everything about top influencers, follow our in-house Who'sThat360 on Instagram and YouTube.

Advertisement

Related Stories

Popular Mobile Brands
  1. OnePlus 15 Showcased in India Ahead of Global Launch Next Month
  2. Lokah Chapter 1 Chandra Is Not Coming to OTT Platforms Anytime Soon
  3. OTT Releases This Week: Two Much, Sundarakanda, Janaawar, and More
  4. Xiaomi 17 Pro Max vs iPhone 17 Pro Max: Price, Features and More Compared
  5. Xiaomi 17 Pro Series Launched With Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5, Rear Display
  6. Vivo Will Replace Funtouch OS with Origin OS 6 in India on This Date
  7. Xiaomi 17 India Launch Confirmed; Could Come With These Specifications
  8. Xiaomi Pad 8 Series Launched With 9,200mAh Battery, 11.2-Inch LCD Screen
  9. iQOO 15 Chipset Details Confirmed Ahead of October Launch
  10. Samsung's Next Galaxy A Series Phone Surfaces Online, Could Debut in 2026
  1. Microsoft Confirms Prices for ROG Xbox Ally X and Xbox Ally; Pre-Orders Sold Out
  2. Vivo Announces OriginOS 6 India Launch Date Ahead of Upcoming Flagship Smartphones
  3. Xiaomi 17 With Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5 Confirmed to Launch in India After Global Debut
  4. Samsung Galaxy A57 5G Surfaces on IMEI Database Ahead of Anticipated Launch in 2026
  5. OpenAI’s ChatGPT Pulse Will Deliver Daily Personalised Updates But at a Privacy Cost
  6. Samsung's One UI 8.5 Update Reportedly Includes New Clock Styles, Blurred Effect for Lock Screen Notifications
  7. Xbox Reveals Forza Horizon 6 at Tokyo Game Show, Will Be Set in Japan
  8. OnePlus 15 Showcased Ahead of Global Launch at Qualcomm's Snapdragon Summit Global Highlights in India
  9. Threads Reportedly Testing Tool to Let Users 'Tag' Algorithm for Custom Feeds
Gadgets 360 is available in
Download Our Apps
Available in Hindi
© Copyright Red Pixels Ventures Limited 2025. All rights reserved.