Sina Corp

Sina Corp
Type Public (NASDAQ: SINA)
Founded November 30, 1998 (1998-11-30)
Headquarters Shanghai, China
Beijing, China
Key people Charles Chao, President, Chairman, CEO
Herman Yu, CFO
Hurst Lin, COO
LC Chang, Vice President
Industry Internet
Products Sina Weibo, Sina Mobile, Sina Online, Sina.net
Revenue $482 million (2011)
Employees 6,400[1]
Website Sina.com
Sina.com.cn
Sina Sports
Sina Video
Alexa rank Increase 13 (August 2015)[2]

Sina () is a Chinese online media company. Sina operates four major business lines: Sina Weibo, Sina Mobile, Sina Online, and Sina.net. Sina has over 100 million registered users worldwide. Sina was recognized by Southern Weekend as the "China's Media of the Year" in 2003.

Sina owns Sina Weibo, a Twitter-like microblog social network, which has 56.5 percent of the Chinese microblogging market based on active users and 86.6 percent based on browsing time over Chinese competitors such as Tencent and Baidu. The social networking service has more than 500 million users[3] and millions of posts per day, and is adding 20 million new users per month, says the company. The top 100 users now have over 180 million followers combined.

Sina.com is the largest Chinese-language web portal. It is run by Sina Corporation, which was founded in 1999. The company was founded in China, and its global financial headquarters have been based in Shanghai since October 1, 2001.

Sina App Engine (SAE) is the earliest and largest PaaS platform for cloud computing in China. It is run by SAE Department, which was founded in 2009. SAE is dedicated in providing stable, effective web deployment and hosting service for those corporations, organizations and independent developers. Now more than 300,000 developers in China are using SAE.

Background

Business coverage

As a website that mainly caters to the Chinese population around the globe, Sina stated that it has about 94.8 million registered users and more than 10 million active users engaged in their fee-based services (10,000 of whom are overseas Chinese in North America). Sina.com provides different subsidiary sites around the world, for example there are 13 access points within Greater China, and subsidiary tailored pages for overseas Chinese, which include Sina US, Sina Japan, Sina Korea, Sina Australia, Sina Europe and Sina Germany.

Sina.com is one of the four major business lines of Sina Corporation (NASDAQ: SINA). The rest of the major business lines are Sina Mobile, Sina Online and Sina.net.

The domain sina.com.cn attracted at least 3.3 million visitors[4] annually by 2008 according to a Compete.com survey.

Sina Corp also owns Sina Weibo, a Chinese microblogging site, similar to Twitter, launched in August 2009. According to Sina Corp the microblogging site has more than 200 million users and millions of posts per day, and is adding 20 million new users per month. The company also said it now has more than 60,000 verified accounts, consisting of celebrities, sports stars and other VIPs. The top 100 users now have over 180 million followers. Furthermore, Sina said that more than 5,000 companies and 2,700 media organizations in China are currently using Sina Weibo.

More recently, Sina also released a "lite-blogging service" similar to Tumblr, called Sina Qing,[5] as well as a location-based service, WeiLingDi.[6]

Popularity

In a survey conducted by Gallup (China) Research Ltd in April 2003, Sina was the most popular website in China, and was estimated to have three billion page views every day. Also, it was awarded the "China's Media of the Year" in 2003 by Southern Weekend.[7]

History

(Information based on Xin, 2002)[8]

In March 1999, Stone Rich Sight Information Technology Ltd (SRS), established by Sina.com's former CEO and President Wang Zhidong, merged with Sinanet.com, a US website company of Sunnyvale, California. The merging of the two largest Chinese websites formed into the later Sina.com. Since then the service had been extended across the straits and North America, before it extended to Hong Kong in July 1999.

Sina.com overtook the dominant role of Sohu.com for the first time in 1999 by its fast, continuous, and comprehensive reports on the NATO Bombing of the Chinese embassy in Belgrade in 1999, according to CNNIC's survey conducted 2 months after the incident.[9]

Sina.com was the first to be approved for listing on the Nasdaq National market on 13 April 2000, followed by Netease and Sohu, two other web-based companies in China, in June and July respectively. It succeeded in raising US$68,000,000 before Nasdaq plummeted in May 2000. In July 2000, Sina.com was the official website for on-line coverage of the 2000 Summer Olympics in Sydney as selected by the government and the Chinese Olympic committee. (Xin, 2002).

Management

Key officers

Partnership

Sina.com cooperates with other web-based companies such as People, Nanfang Daily, Lifeweek and Xinhuanet, etc. Apart from the media partners, its clients include Microsoft, DELL, IBM, Motorola, and Kodak. Recently Sina.com started developing its business in the field of wireless internet, in the meantime collaborating with China Mobile, China Telecom, Ericsson.

In January 2004, Sina.com and Yahoo.com started to jointly provide online auction services in China; in response to this, EachNet (Chinese: "易趣網"), which cooperates with eBay, lowered its registration fee in early February 2004 in order to keep its market share.[11]

Sina also sponsors the annual ChinICT conference held at the Tsinghua Science Park.

Recently, Sina has begun collaborating with Qihoo 360 on internet security. Through this collaboration, Qihoo 360 intend to provide Sina Weibo tech support in order to protect Weibo from hackers and viruses. As of April 24, 2012 an official statement has not yet been made announcing the collaboration.[12]

Marketing

To provide tailored internet services for local people, Sina.com has been conducting quantitative and qualitative marketing researches, including demographic research, psychograph, etc., on target audience in specific regions.

Features

Multiple services

Sina.com provides internet services to the Chinese population around the world. In every localized website, there are over thirty integrated channels, including news, sports, technology information, finance, advertising services, entertainment, fashion, and travel.

Sina.com is a multiple-service provider, its major services are SMS, Mail, Search, Games, Match, Entertainment, Sina Blog, Sina Microblogging and Sports. Sina Blog (中文:新浪博客) is the blog service of Sina.com, which features the blogs of celebrities, including the most popular blog in the world, the one of Xu Jinglei.[13] Sina Weibo is an equivalent to Twitter. The latter is blocked by the Chinese authorities.[14] Many celebrities from mainland China, Taiwan and also Hong Kong use Sina's Microblog as a platform to reach out to their fans and supporters. Some famous users on Sina's Microblog include Taiwanese hosts Dee Hsu and Kevin Tsai, with more than ten million followers on their microblogs each.

A big challenge for Sina is monetizing the massive Weibo following. Sina has taken several steps in that direction, and is reportedly developing a "pay-for-forward" feature. The feature will enable users to pay to have a message forwarded by an account with a large following. Sina plans to keep 20% of the revenue generated from "pay-for-forward" fees.[15]

Local content

Internationalized services have a common layout which consists of sections like news, information, infotainment and email services with localized content.}

Localization involves political censorship. As with all internet content providers operating within mainland China, the web pages which are geared toward mainland China audiences have internet censors controlling the discussion for sensitive political content. In addition, the news from sina.com comes from local newspapers, which in the case of mainland China are themselves subject to censorship by the government. This censorship does not extend to pages and forums which are not intended for audiences within mainland China.

Online news

Sina.com provides a lot of feature news as the focus of the lead story or the main photo. On the other hand, its domestic political news is sourced from The People’s Daily or Xinhua News Agency. Compared to conventional medium for news distribution, Sina.com is a platform for news articles from the traditional media. That means, according to its CEO, Wang Zhidong, Sina.com would never hire journalists (Xin, 2000).

Network technology

According to the company's published information, Sina.comXpressTM and Sina.comPlusTM are Sina.com's two main exclusive technologies, which bring ease-of-use benefits and enable the audience of Big 5 (traditional Chinese character), and GB (simplified Chinese characters) to view the webpages sourced from around the Chinese communities of the world.

Publications

See also

References

  1. "Company Profile for Sohu.com, Inc. (SINA)". Retrieved 2013-08-10.
  2. "Sina.com.cn Site Info". Alexa Internet. Retrieved 2015-08-13.
  3. Josh Ong (2013-02-21). "China’s Sina Weibo grew 73% in 2012, passing 500 million registered accounts". thenextweb.com. Retrieved 2013-05-21.
  4. "siteanalytics.compete.com". siteanalytics.compete.com. 2011-10-26. Retrieved 2012-08-23.
  5. "Sina Testing Lite-Blog Qing". iChinaStock. Retrieved 31 May 2011.
  6. Gobry, Pascal-Emmanuel. "After Launching China's Twitter, China's Yahoo Launches China's Foursquare". Business Insider. Retrieved 31 May 2011.
  7. nanfangdaily.com.cn (Chinese) Archived February 4, 2004, at the Wayback Machine.
  8. Xin, H. (2002). The Surfer-in-chief and the would-be kings of content – a short study of Sina.com and Netease.com. In S. H. Donald., M. Keane. & Y. Hong. (eds.). Media in China: consumption, content and crisis. London: Routledge.
  9. survey.yam.com, Xin, 2002.
  10. "Sina management". Corp.sina.com.cn. Retrieved 2012-08-23.
  11. "EachNet's announcement". Beijing Entertainment News.
  12. "Sina Weibo Cooperates with 360 to Check Short URLs and Guarantee Weibo Users' Online Security". BrightWire.
  13. Chen, Peijin (2006-05-05). "Xu Jinglei's blog joins the gilded ranks on Technorati". Shanghaiist.com. Retrieved 2012-08-23.
  14. Mackey, Robert (2 June 2009). "China's Great Firewall Blocks Twitter". The New York Times.
  15. Hsu, Alex (15 Jul 2013). "Sina to Launch "Pay-for-Forward" Feature on Sina Weibo". BrightWire News.

External links

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