How Apple was topped in China

AP Photo/Mark Lennihan, File

AP Photo/Mark Lennihan, File

Published Mar 21, 2017

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Beijing - Duan Yongping is convinced Tim Cook didn’t have

a clue who he was when they first met a couple years ago. The Apple boss

probably does now.

Duan is the reclusive billionaire who founded Oppo and

Vivo, the twin smartphone brands that dealt the world’s largest

company a stinging defeat in China last year. Once derided as cheap iPhone

knockoffs, they leapfrogged the rankings and shoved Apple Inc. out of the top

three in 2016 -- when iPhone shipments fell in China for the first time.

They managed to do it because the American smartphone

giant didn’t adapt to local competition, the entrepreneur told Bloomberg in

what he said was his first interview in 10 years. Oppo and Vivo employed

tactics Apple was reluctant to match, such as cheaper devices with high-end

features, for fear of jeopardizing its winning formula elsewhere, Duan said.

“Apple couldn’t beat us in China because even they have

flaws,” the 56-year-old electronics mogul said. “They’re maybe too stubborn

sometimes. They made a lot of great things, like their operating system, but we

surpass them in other areas.”

That’s not to say Duan doesn’t appreciate the iPhone

maker’s global clout. In fact, the billionaire’s obsession with his US

rival is legion: he’s long been a big-time investor in Apple and an unabashed

fan of its chief executive officer.

“I’ve met Tim Cook on several occasions. He might not

know me but we’ve chatted a little,” Duan said. “I like him a lot.”

Read also:  Apple hopes research centres will boost sales

Apple couldn’t confirm Duan’s meeting with Cook when

contacted by Bloomberg. But Duan has blogged incessantly about Apple’s

products, share price and operations since 2013, when the company was worth

half what it is today. He needs “a really big pocket” because he carries

four devices, including a heavily-used iPhone. In a 2015 post, he argued

Apple’s profit should reach $100 billion within five years. Today, Duan won’t

say when he actually bought in but says much of his overseas wealth remains

tied up in the iPhone maker. He even lives in Palo Alto, an easy drive from

Apple’s new UFO-like headquarters in Cupertino.

Extraordinary

“Apple is an extraordinary company. It is a model for us

to learn from,” Duan said. “We don’t have the concept of surpassing anyone, the

focus instead is to improve ourselves.”

Oppo’s gains against Apple may now earn an even broader

following for the billionaire dubbed China’s Warren Buffett by local media for

his investment acumen. Born in Jiangxi, a birthplace of Mao Zedong’s

Communist revolution, Duan began his career at a state-run vacuum tube plant

before making his name with homegrown electronics.

Duan left the factory floor around 1990, when China was

just embracing capitalism and opening industries to private investment. He

headed to southern China’s Guangdong province, then the cradle of liberal

reforms, to run a struggling electronics plant. His first product was the

“Subor” gaming console with dual-cartridge slots - a direct shot at Nintendo

Co.’s classic Family Computer, known elsewhere as the Nintendo Entertainment

System. The 100- to 400-yuan Subor became a hit in the absence of local

competitors. Duan even enlisted Kung Fu star Jackie Chan to endorse the device.

By 1995, revenue from the Subor exceeded 1 billion yuan.

Duan left to set up a new business that year as the

operation flourished -- a pattern he would repeat in later years. He christened

his second venture Bubugao, literally “rising higher step-by-step.” BBK, as the

company came to be known, created a popular line of VCD and MP3 players but

later also made DVD players for global brands. Subsidiary Bubugao Communication

Equipment Co. became one of the country’s biggest feature-phone makers around

2000, going head-to-head with Nokia and Motorola.

It was the first iPhone in 2007 that paved the way for

Oppo and Vivo. While they share a common founder in Duan, the sister brands are

fierce competitors, trotting out dueling marketing campaigns in markets from

India to Southeast Asia. Their salesmanship philosophy plays well in

emerging markets, IDC research manager Kiranjeet Kaur said.

“The companies fully understand how to make the best of

their people, a specialty they inherited from Duan,” said Nicole Peng, a senior

director at Canalys. Importantly, they understood their millennial audience.

“Many of their managers are young and have been working at the company since

graduation.”

Apple’s backyard

Duan’s latest endeavours were, in part, dreamed up in

Apple’s backyard. By 2001 at the age of 40, Duan had decided to move to California to

focus on investment and philanthropy, later installing his family in a mansion

he reportedly bought from Cisco Systems Inc. Chairman John Chambers. But the

advent of the smartphone forced the entrepreneur out of retirement.

By the second half of 2000s, BBK was on the verge of

falling apart as sales of its basic devices slowed. The likes of Huawei and

Coolpad were making smartphones priced at around 1 000 yuan. That nearly put

the company under, Duan recalled.

“We were in serious discussions about how to close the

company peacefully - in a way that the employees can leave unhurt and suppliers

don’t lose money,” he said.

Those intense brainstorming sessions spawned the two

businesses that would go on to embody Duan’s greatest success. In 2005, the entrepreneur

and his protege Tony Chen decided to create a new company. Dubbed Oppo, it sold

music players but ramped up to smartphones in 2011. In 2009, BBK itself

created Vivo, headed by another of Duan’s disciples, Shen Wei.

“Making mobile phones was not my call,” said Duan. “But I

reckoned we could do well in this market.”

Read also:  Will Apple turn to China?

At first, neither label garnered much attention. The

iPhone was captivating users with its revolutionary apps system

and elegant interface, while BlackBerrys lorded over the corporate market.

But Oppo and Vivo then developed a marketing-blitz approach that relied on

local celebrity endorsement and a vast re-sellers’ store network across China.

They crafted an affordable image that appealed to a millennial crowd, then

tricked out their devices with high-end specs. On the surface, Oppo and Vivo

phones now routinely surpass the iPhone on measures such as charging speeds,

memory and battery life.

It paid off. The duo together shipped more than 147

million smartphones in China in 2016, dwarfing Huawei Technologies’s 76.6

million units, Apple’s 44.9 million and Xiaomi’s 41.5 million, IDC estimates.

Oppo and Vivo both doubled their 2015 haul. In the fourth quarter, they

were number 1 and number 3, respectively - Huawei was second. Their approach worked

particularly well in lower-tier cities, where mid-range phones became a

mainstream hit, said Tay Xiaohan, an IDC analyst. 

Duan’s smartphone progeny are also gaining some momentum

beyond their home turf. In the fourth quarter, Oppo and Vivo were fourth and

fifth in the world, respectively. About a quarter of Oppo’s shipments went to

markets like India, where it hopes to dig in before Apple establishes a

meaningful presence.

“Smartphones are an unprecedented opportunity. We

forecast at least for the next 10 or 20 years, there’s no replacement. But we

don’t know,” Duan said.

Cook said on the weekend that Apple doesn’t have a

specific goal for market share.

China competition

“The competition is more fierce in China - not only in

this industry, but in many industries,” Cook told the China Development Forum

in Beijing. “I think that’s a credit to a number of local companies that put

their energies into making good products.”

Duan has increasingly kept his distance from the Chinese

smartphone makers despite remaining a significant shareholder (he won’t say how

much). He says he prefers to stay out of the spotlight and enjoy California

with his journalist wife and kids. In fact, he attends board meetings but

claims to get most of his information on Oppo and Vivo from the internet, to

avoid “disturbing them.”

His rivals have been less considerate. Last October,

Xiaomi Corp. co-founder Lei Jun lambasted competitors who build dense store

channels in rural areas in pursuit of quick sales. In an interview with China

Entrepreneurs Magazine in October, Lei accused such players of using

“imbalanced information” to trick buyers into shunning Xiaomi, precipitating

its decline from the top spot.

“Those who said this were insane,” Duan said without

naming names. “When someone talks about an information imbalance, deep down

they believe consumers are idiots.”

His most visible passion these days is stock investment,

which is why he agreed to pay a then-record $620 100 in 2006 to lunch with

Buffett. Quotes from the Sage of Omaha still pepper Duan’s blogposts,

right alongside tips on golf and Apple.

Duan cemented his reputation as a savvy financier in part

by digging his friend, Netease Inc. founder William Ding, out of a hole. Ding’s

internet company tanked to as low as 13 cents after the dot-com bubble burst,

then almost became the first U.S.-listed Chinese company to get tossed off the

Nasdaq over an auditing issue. Duan came to his friend’s aid, buying about 5

percent of Netease with just $2 million in 2002, when the stock price averaged

16 cents. Company filings show he still held just over 4 million shares as

of March 2009, but Duan said he sold much of that when Netease hit $40.

His other much-studied holding is premium-liquor company

Kweichow Moutai Co. He said he bought in at 180 yuan in late 2012. While it

nearly halved in 2014, Moutai today trades above 370 yuan.

Duan isn’t shy about talking up his trades, not least of

which is Apple, which remains near a record high despite a rare sales decline

in 2016. But looking back on his decades as first entrepreneur then

stock-picker, his proudest moments remain rooted in BBK. Though he claims to

keep it at arm’s length, he admits to worrying about succession and whether the

company culture will survive another generation of leaders. 

And while BBK’s Vivo and Duan’s own Oppo have done well,

there’s no certainty in a fast-moving business. Both are starting to ramp up

everything from the features on their phones to marketing campaigns: Oppo

notably used Barcelona’s Mobile World Congress to unveil its most advanced

camera technology yet, signaling a new maturity.

One thing’s for sure, Duan doesn’t see himself returning

to an active executive, leaving others to deal with the next challenge.

“I’ve made it clear many years ago, I will never make a

comeback,” he said. “If there’s a problem they can’t fix, then neither can I.”

BLOOMBERG

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