More Chinese internet portal news.Enjoy. I'm on my way to dinner and guess where? Could it be Chinese? Hmmmmmmm. Good luck tomorrow
Three Portals Form Alliance For Greater China By Hans Lombardo Managing Editor, asia.internet.com [July 14, 1999--HONG KONG] Hong Kong's Netvigator, China's Netease, and Taiwan's Kimo have formed a trilateral strategic partnership called the "The Greater China Portal Alliance" (GCPA).
The avowed goals of the alliance are to promote Internet usage across borders in Greater China, help assess users' on-line requirements for Chinese contents, and enable more effective Internet search across the region.
According to the three portals, their combined daily page views are over 12 million.
The first phase of GCPA trilateral on-line banner advertisement exchange, joint logo display and marketing, and an on-line customer survey.
Judy Inn, a vice president from Cable & Wireless HKT IMS, the operator of Netvigator, commented."It is a true combination of the best in the three markets, delivering a superior and comprehensive Chinese on-line service. We are confident that it will result in increased traffic to our specific sites."
William Ding, Netease's CEO, said, "As a well-received portal site in China, Netease is excited to explore and promote the internationalization of the Chinese Internet service."
David Lu, president of Kimo, said: "The establishment of the Greater China Alliance Portal is a major step taken by the leading portal service providers in Asia to make significant improvements in the breadth of information and convenience of service delivered to customers."
According to Steve Fox, a veteran in the Greater China Web space, the move "..is a reaction by these portals to the dominance and greater reach of Sina and Yahoo portals in the Greater China market."
However, he point out that "..this announcement does little to indicate how this new alliance will benefit the end user. For example, most users in Taiwan can't even view the Netease homepage because it's in simplified Chinese."
More perplexing is the fact that Netvigator, earlier this year, announced plans to build a portal for Greater China including separate editions for China and Taiwan, which would have to be the case because they would need different written languages.
"I would speculate that if Kimo's owners are looking for a reasonable exit strategy, acquisition by Cable & Wireless could be it," added an industry observer.
Equally baffling is the fact that Netease, which is planning an IPO on NASDAQ by the end of the year, is a natural competitor to Netvigator in China. |