TechNews Pictorial PriceGrabber Video Mon Nov 25 02:46:24 2024

0


Xiaomi's key to smartphone success: 'Be friends with our
Source: Jessica Dolcourt


Xiaomi executives Hugo Barra, left, and Lin Bin address journalists in San Francisco.

The up-and-coming Chinese smartphone manufacturer has gone from obscurity to China's number-one vendor in just four years. Xiaomi owes a large part of that to its attitude toward customers.

For Xiaomi, customers aren't just nameless, faceless people. They're more like friends.

Four years ago, the upstart Chinese phone-maker had 100 customers. Today, it has over 100 million. Ask co-founder and president Lin Bin and he'll tell you an important ingredient in the company's success is its ingrained attitude toward buyers. His motto: "Be friends with our fans."


Lin spent nearly an hour at a Thursday event in San Francisco drumming home the message that its relationship with customers is the heart of Xiaomi's explosive growth to become the top smartphone maker in China, the world's most populous country.

One chief difference between Xiaomi and its better-known rivals Apple and Samsung is how involved its users are, said Hugo Barra, vice president of global. "We have higher engagement with our fans through our own media network than through [popular Chinese social network] Weibo, by like two times," Barra said.

Xiaomi also doesn't refer to its followers as buyers or customers, Lin emphasized. They're "fans."
Popcorn and rap videos

To illustrate Xiaomi's reliance on relationships with its loyal user base, Lin turned to its online community. The Mi Forum, which serves owners of Xiaomi branded devices and the company's MiUI (pronounced "mee-you-eye") version of Android, has 40 million users, Lin said.

James Martin/CNET

That is an impressive number for a company that's only been around for four years. What's more, these users show their dedication by posting photos of themselves with Xiaomi products and participating in frequent contests. One group of friends went as far as creating a rap video almost 4 minutes long dedicated to the company's wares.

The forums contain pages of these examples, Lin said.

Xiaomi also reaches out to fans through "popcorn festivals," events held throughout China and other markets where the brand is popular. There, 300 to 500 guests gather to bask in all things Xiaomi: they pose for photos and play games, win prizes and cheer at talent shows, and chat with Xiaomi executives and staff. And yes, there's popcorn.


All companies say they listen to their customers, using the best suggestions to improve real-life products. Xiaomi says the idea to integrate the flashlight button into the drop-down notification shade was supplied by a user who couldn't see the keyhole to his doorway when stumbling home drunk.


}

© 2021 PopYard - Technology for Today!| about us | privacy policy |