Tag: wechat

Mobile payments made Lunar New Year cash gifts fast and easy

The 2015 holiday gifts were exchanged digitally, and quite frequently over smartphones.

The 2015 Lunar New Year used mobile payments more than any previous year, as instant messaging platforms, such as WeChat from Tencent, drew a great deal of attention and made it easier for people to exchange cash gifts.

WeChat and the China Central Television Spring Festival gala were broadcast on Lunar New Year’s Eve.

During the show, mobile payments were featured, as audience members shook their smartphones throughout the broadcast in order to increase their chances of receiving red envelopes that contained cash gifts from WeChat. According to WeChat’s own figures, the show recorded 11 billion smartphone shakes. The high point was at 10:34pm, at which time the company had been recording an average of 810 million shakes every minute. During that time, there were 120 million red envelopes being distributed.

These mobile payments were issued to the people who took part in the WeChat red envelope promotion.

Mobile Payments - Chinese LanternThe service also made it possible for smartphone users to send the smartphone payments to friends and family members who were registered on their contact list through WeChat. According to the company, there were over 1 billion red envelopes that were sent out to recipients on Lunar New Year’s eve. This was about 200 times the number that had been recorded for the same day in 2014.

While many were very happy with the number of exchanges that they received and were shocked at how many different red envelopes were sent in their direction, there were some that voiced concerns over this use of digital payments over mobile. Some observers expressed that they were afraid that younger users of the mobile app might become so taken with the sending and receiving of the red envelopes over the messenger program that they will spend more time paying attention to their devices than they will with their actual families, in person.

This concern was not without foundation, as some people did admit that over the two day Lunar New Year holiday, they barely stopped checking their devices, as it was a lot of fun to be able to send and receive the red envelopes. Most of them were sent in tiny amounts, but people enjoyed the opportunity to receive them, and to send other mobile payments to their friends, family, and coworkers.

JD.com launches new mobile commerce service for merchants

JD.com and Tencent continue their push into the mobile sector

JD.com, one of the largest online retailers in China, is taking steps to combine its business with Tencent, developer of China’s most used messaging and gaming platforms. Earlier this year, Tencent purchased a 15% stake in JD.com in its ongoing effort to compete with Alibaba. The two companies have been working together to establish a stronger foothold in the mobile commerce market, with Tencent trying to convert its WeChat users into JD.com shoppers and vice versa.

New service will allow retailers to build their own mobile commerce websites and connect with consumers

JD.com has created a new service called PaiPai Weidian that will allow merchants to easily create mobile commerce websites. This will help smaller merchants to better engage the mobile audience, which is comprised of a rapidly growing consumer base that is eager to purchase products online from their smartphones and tablets. The new service will allow these merchants to promote their products on the WeChat platform, which boasts of more than 460 million active monthly users throughout Asia.

Mobile sites help bring in $16.2 million in mobile payments

Mobile Commerce  - New Service LaunchedThe service could go a long way in helping JD.com establish a stronger presence in mobile commerce. The company sees a great deal of promise in this sector, as mobile consumers have shown that they are willing to spend large amounts of money online. During China’s Singles Day, which is the retail equivalent of Black Friday in the United States, some $16.2 million in mobile payments were processed through sites built by JD.com’s new service. The service had a test launch in September of this year, during which small retailers were able to test its capabilities.

Mobile commerce continues to explode in China

Mobile commerce is thriving in China. This is largely due to the growing number of people that are gaining access to smartphones and the mobile Internet. Growth is also being powered by companies that are offering mobile shopping and payment services to consumers and retailers alike. Retailers are beginning to take advantage of these services in order to connect with a new generation of consumers.