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    <title>Asia Startup Pulse</title>
    <description>The Asia Startup Pulse Podcast, previously known as China Startup Pulse Podcast,  is an original weekly podcast for anyone interested in understanding the innovation, business, and tech landscape in Asia. We bring the best of the Asian startup ecosystem, showcasing entrepreneurial stories, insights from thought leaders, and dissecting the strategies employed by tech giants.

Backed by SOSV, Chinaccelerator, and Mobile Only Accelerator (MOX), we understand firsthand what it’s like to be an entrepreneur in Asia. Over the last decade, we have helped over 170 startups cross borders and make their mark in Asia. With that in mind, the podcast offers real, practical, and unique insights.

The Asia Startup Pulse is hosted by Oscar Ramos, Ryan Shuken, and William Bao Bean, hackers, and hustlers with years of experience in Asia and China’s startup scene.

Subscribe to us on iTunes, Google Podcasts, Spotify, Stitcher, Ximalaya FM, or wherever you listen to podcasts.</description>
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    <pubDate>Mon, 22 Nov 2021 13:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
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    <itunes:summary>The Asia Startup Pulse Podcast, previously known as China Startup Pulse Podcast,  is an original weekly podcast for anyone interested in understanding the innovation, business, and tech landscape in Asia. We bring the best of the Asian startup ecosystem, showcasing entrepreneurial stories, insights from thought leaders, and dissecting the strategies employed by tech giants.

Backed by SOSV, Chinaccelerator, and Mobile Only Accelerator (MOX), we understand firsthand what it’s like to be an entrepreneur in Asia. Over the last decade, we have helped over 170 startups cross borders and make their mark in Asia. With that in mind, the podcast offers real, practical, and unique insights.

The Asia Startup Pulse is hosted by Oscar Ramos, Ryan Shuken, and William Bao Bean, hackers, and hustlers with years of experience in Asia and China’s startup scene.

Subscribe to us on iTunes, Google Podcasts, Spotify, Stitcher, Ximalaya FM, or wherever you listen to podcasts.</itunes:summary>
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      <itunes:name>Orbit Startups</itunes:name>
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      <title>ASP Selection | Inside the VC Mind: The rise of Fintech in China, with Wei Hopeman, Co-Founder and Managing Partner of Arbor Ventures</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>Final call for signing up for Chinaccelerator 20 Demo Day Nov 24 on <a href="https://www.eventbrite.com/e/chinaccelerator-demo-day-20-livestream-20-tickets-188035859317?aff=podcast">Eventbrite</a>. We will soon be back with the brand-new season. </p><p>Today, ASP selected the special episode that Oscar Ramos sat down with venture capitalist and fintech investor Wei Hopeman. After beginning her career in financial services and investment banking, Wei co-founded Arbor Ventures in 2013, the first VC fund specialized in fintech in the Asian ecosystem. She talks to us about the growth of fintech, the benefits of corporate VCs, and how founders and corporate VCs can improve their interactions with each other.</p><p>Show notes:<br /><strong>1:28</strong> Intro </p><p><strong>2:07</strong> How Wei got into financial services </p><p><strong>5:46</strong> Going into investment banking </p><p><strong>7:30</strong> The growth of fintech in Asia </p><p><strong>9:32</strong> The lack of infrastructure in financial services </p><p><strong>12:18</strong> Launching fintech in China </p><p><strong>15:18</strong> Benefits of corporate VCs </p><p><strong>17:08</strong> Key questions a founder should ask corporate VCs </p><p><strong>18:31</strong> Key difference between types of VCs </p><p><strong>21:02</strong> Educating corporates in working with startups </p><p><strong>23:17</strong> Women in VC </p><p><strong>30:16</strong> The future of Arbor Ventures</p><p>thanks to our host <strong>Oscar Ramos</strong>, guest <strong>Wei Hopeman</strong>, editor <strong>David</strong> and <strong>Geep</strong>, organizer <strong>Chinaccelerator</strong> and sponsor <strong>People Squared</strong>. Be sure to check out our website at <a href="https://chinaccelerator.com/">Chinaccelerator Website</a></p><p>Follow us on LinkedIn:  <a href="https://www.linkedin.com/company/asia-startup-pulse">Asia Startup Pulse</a></p><p>Email us: <a href="mailto:team@chinastartuppulse.com"><strong>team@chinastartuppulse.com</strong></a></p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Mon, 22 Nov 2021 13:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Orbit Startups)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Final call for signing up for Chinaccelerator 20 Demo Day Nov 24 on <a href="https://www.eventbrite.com/e/chinaccelerator-demo-day-20-livestream-20-tickets-188035859317?aff=podcast">Eventbrite</a>. We will soon be back with the brand-new season. </p><p>Today, ASP selected the special episode that Oscar Ramos sat down with venture capitalist and fintech investor Wei Hopeman. After beginning her career in financial services and investment banking, Wei co-founded Arbor Ventures in 2013, the first VC fund specialized in fintech in the Asian ecosystem. She talks to us about the growth of fintech, the benefits of corporate VCs, and how founders and corporate VCs can improve their interactions with each other.</p><p>Show notes:<br /><strong>1:28</strong> Intro </p><p><strong>2:07</strong> How Wei got into financial services </p><p><strong>5:46</strong> Going into investment banking </p><p><strong>7:30</strong> The growth of fintech in Asia </p><p><strong>9:32</strong> The lack of infrastructure in financial services </p><p><strong>12:18</strong> Launching fintech in China </p><p><strong>15:18</strong> Benefits of corporate VCs </p><p><strong>17:08</strong> Key questions a founder should ask corporate VCs </p><p><strong>18:31</strong> Key difference between types of VCs </p><p><strong>21:02</strong> Educating corporates in working with startups </p><p><strong>23:17</strong> Women in VC </p><p><strong>30:16</strong> The future of Arbor Ventures</p><p>thanks to our host <strong>Oscar Ramos</strong>, guest <strong>Wei Hopeman</strong>, editor <strong>David</strong> and <strong>Geep</strong>, organizer <strong>Chinaccelerator</strong> and sponsor <strong>People Squared</strong>. Be sure to check out our website at <a href="https://chinaccelerator.com/">Chinaccelerator Website</a></p><p>Follow us on LinkedIn:  <a href="https://www.linkedin.com/company/asia-startup-pulse">Asia Startup Pulse</a></p><p>Email us: <a href="mailto:team@chinastartuppulse.com"><strong>team@chinastartuppulse.com</strong></a></p>
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      <itunes:title>ASP Selection | Inside the VC Mind: The rise of Fintech in China, with Wei Hopeman, Co-Founder and Managing Partner of Arbor Ventures</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Orbit Startups</itunes:author>
      <itunes:duration>00:31:31</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>Fintech has come a long way in China, from barely being recognized to one of the fastest growing markets in the region. As the world’s leader in Fintech technology, China is a breeding ground for Internet finance companies, and accordingly, investment in the industry. With millions of users and an ever-growing number of fintech unicorns, the future of Internet finance looks exceedingly bright in China.</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>Fintech has come a long way in China, from barely being recognized to one of the fastest growing markets in the region. As the world’s leader in Fintech technology, China is a breeding ground for Internet finance companies, and accordingly, investment in the industry. With millions of users and an ever-growing number of fintech unicorns, the future of Internet finance looks exceedingly bright in China.</itunes:subtitle>
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      <title>Inside the VC Mind: The Rise of Technification in Southeast Asia, with Peng T. Ong, Co-founder and Managing Partner of Monk&apos;s Hill Ventures (rebroadcast)</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>Sign up for Chinaccelerator 20 Demo Day Nov 24 at <a href="https://www.eventbrite.com/e/chinaccelerator-demo-day-20-livestream-20-tickets-188035859317?aff=podcast">https://www.eventbrite.com/e/chinaccelerator-demo-day-20-livestream-20-tickets-188035859317?aff=podcast</a></p><p>In this episode, we talk about Peng’s journey as an investor and how he perceives the great potential in Southeast Asia. More importantly, he summarizes a very important trend in SEA’s startup ecosystem, "Technification". We also talk about the impact that China's Internet giants have on SEA through investments and M&A.</p><p>Show Notes:</p><p>2:26 Peng’s journey as an investor<br />3:54 Main differences btw seed round and Series A<br />9:47 More capital investment in SEA<br />10:52 The most interesting trend in SEA<br />11:28 “Technification” in China<br />12:36 The opportunities of “technification” in SEA<br />15:05 “There is no way for a company to grow that fast without technology”<br />18:03 The core DNA of a successful founding team<br />19:26 China’s role in SEA’s service industry<br />22:58 The role of Chinese and Japanese corporate venture capital in SEA<br />26:56 The infrastructure development in SEA<br />28:57 A hard push on deep technology in SEA?</p><p>Many thanks to our guest <strong>Peng T.Ong</strong>; host <strong>Oscar Ramos</strong>; producers  <strong>Eva Shi</strong> and  <strong>Sagar Chaudhary</strong>; editor <strong>David</strong>; organizer <strong>Chinaccelerator</strong>; and sponsor <strong>People Squared</strong>. Be sure to check out our website <a href="https://chinaccelerator.com/"><strong>www.chinaccelerator.com</strong></a></p><p>Share, subscribe, review, enjoy!</p><p>Follow us on LinkedIn:  <a href="https://www.linkedin.com/company/asia-startup-pulse">https://www.linkedin.com/company/asia-startup-pulse</a></p><p>Email us: <a href="mailto:team@chinastartuppulse.com"><strong>team@chinastartuppulse.com</strong></a></p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Thu, 18 Nov 2021 13:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Chinaccelerator, SOSV)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Sign up for Chinaccelerator 20 Demo Day Nov 24 at <a href="https://www.eventbrite.com/e/chinaccelerator-demo-day-20-livestream-20-tickets-188035859317?aff=podcast">https://www.eventbrite.com/e/chinaccelerator-demo-day-20-livestream-20-tickets-188035859317?aff=podcast</a></p><p>In this episode, we talk about Peng’s journey as an investor and how he perceives the great potential in Southeast Asia. More importantly, he summarizes a very important trend in SEA’s startup ecosystem, "Technification". We also talk about the impact that China's Internet giants have on SEA through investments and M&A.</p><p>Show Notes:</p><p>2:26 Peng’s journey as an investor<br />3:54 Main differences btw seed round and Series A<br />9:47 More capital investment in SEA<br />10:52 The most interesting trend in SEA<br />11:28 “Technification” in China<br />12:36 The opportunities of “technification” in SEA<br />15:05 “There is no way for a company to grow that fast without technology”<br />18:03 The core DNA of a successful founding team<br />19:26 China’s role in SEA’s service industry<br />22:58 The role of Chinese and Japanese corporate venture capital in SEA<br />26:56 The infrastructure development in SEA<br />28:57 A hard push on deep technology in SEA?</p><p>Many thanks to our guest <strong>Peng T.Ong</strong>; host <strong>Oscar Ramos</strong>; producers  <strong>Eva Shi</strong> and  <strong>Sagar Chaudhary</strong>; editor <strong>David</strong>; organizer <strong>Chinaccelerator</strong>; and sponsor <strong>People Squared</strong>. Be sure to check out our website <a href="https://chinaccelerator.com/"><strong>www.chinaccelerator.com</strong></a></p><p>Share, subscribe, review, enjoy!</p><p>Follow us on LinkedIn:  <a href="https://www.linkedin.com/company/asia-startup-pulse">https://www.linkedin.com/company/asia-startup-pulse</a></p><p>Email us: <a href="mailto:team@chinastartuppulse.com"><strong>team@chinastartuppulse.com</strong></a></p>
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      <itunes:title>Inside the VC Mind: The Rise of Technification in Southeast Asia, with Peng T. Ong, Co-founder and Managing Partner of Monk&apos;s Hill Ventures (rebroadcast)</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Chinaccelerator, SOSV</itunes:author>
      <itunes:duration>00:34:07</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>We are very honored to invite Peng T. Ong, co-founder and managing partner of Monk&apos;s Hill Ventures, to join our Asia Startup Pulse today.

Monk’s Hill Ventures is a venture capital firm investing in early-stage tech companies, primarily Series A, in Southeast Asia. Peng is an industry veteran with over 25 years of experience as an entrepreneur, founder, and investor in Silicon Valley and in Asia. He is based in Indonesia and is a board member of Glints, ELSA, Finaxar, and Intelligent Video Solutions. Prior to Monk’s Hill Ventures, he was a Venture Partner at GSR Ventures in China. </itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>We are very honored to invite Peng T. Ong, co-founder and managing partner of Monk&apos;s Hill Ventures, to join our Asia Startup Pulse today.

Monk’s Hill Ventures is a venture capital firm investing in early-stage tech companies, primarily Series A, in Southeast Asia. Peng is an industry veteran with over 25 years of experience as an entrepreneur, founder, and investor in Silicon Valley and in Asia. He is based in Indonesia and is a board member of Glints, ELSA, Finaxar, and Intelligent Video Solutions. Prior to Monk’s Hill Ventures, he was a Venture Partner at GSR Ventures in China. </itunes:subtitle>
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      <title>Inside the VC Mind: Technification in South Asia: Internationalisation of Indian SaaS Startups, with Sanjay Nath, Co-founder and Managing Partner of Blume Ventures (rebroadcast)</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>In today’s episode, we talk with Sanjay Nath, Co-founder and Managing Partner of Blume Ventures, one of India’s leading early-stage venture funds. Sanjay also represents Blume on the boards of Arka Venture Labs and the Draper Venture Network. Blume focuses on Seed to Pre-Series A stages of funding and has made over 100 investments across its 10-year history across multiple funds. Sanjay has invested in and advises a wide portfolio of startups including GreyOrange Robotics, Dataweave, Locus, Tricog, LBB, Lulu, Lambdatest, TapChief (acquired by Unacademy), Nektar.ai, and Obviously.ai amongst others.</p><p>What is the trajectory for Indian startups expanding abroad? How do they start in India and move to the US and SEA? How can startups build and sell remotely and operate in a virtual world? What are the repercussions of localization when internationalization? Sanjay, as an active investor in the space, brings his experience in answering all these questions and more!</p><p>Sign up for Chinaccelerator 20 Demo Day Nov 24 at <a href="https://www.eventbrite.com/e/chinaccelerator-demo-day-20-livestream-20-tickets-188035859317?aff=podcast">https://www.eventbrite.com/e/chinaccelerator-demo-day-20-livestream-20-tickets-188035859317?aff=podcast</a></p><p><strong>Show Notes</strong></p><p>02:10 Introduction to Sanjay Nath<br />02:55 Sanjay’s transition from consulting to VC<br />07:41 The trend of Indian startups expanding overseas<br />11:20 Overcoming the barriers of  cross-border expansion<br />16:38 How Blume VC supports startups with their expertise and best practices<br />24:10 Localisation vs Internationalisation from Day 1<br />28:22 Popular revenue models among Indian startups<br />31:04 The second-order effect of Covid19 on cross-border expansion<br />38:22 Opportunities for Indian SaaS companies in China<br />41:05 Leveraging diaspora and ecosystems to expand to the US and Europe<br />45:17 Sanjay’s final thoughts </p><p>Many thanks to our guests <strong> Sanjay Nath</strong>; host <strong>Oscar Ramos</strong>; producers <strong>Eva Shi</strong> and  <strong>Sagar Chaudhary</strong>; editor <strong>David Xu</strong>; organizer <strong>Chinaccelerator</strong>; and sponsor<strong> People Squared</strong>. Be sure to check out our website <a href="https://chinaccelerator.com/"><strong>www.chinaccelerator.com</strong></a></p><p>Share, subscribe, review, enjoy!</p><p>To join our listener group on WeChat, please add SOSV Helper (WeChat ID: sosvhero) and ask for the group  invitation.</p><p>To subscribe to our newsletter, please visit  www.asiastartuppulse.com</p><p>Follow us on LinkedIn:  <a href="https://www.linkedin.com/company/asia-startup-pulse/">https://www.linkedin.com/company/asia-startup-pulse</a></p><p>Email us: <a href="mailto:asp-team@asiastartuppulse.com" target="_blank">asp-team@asiastartuppulse.com</a></p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Fri, 12 Nov 2021 13:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (SOSV, Chinaccelerator)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>In today’s episode, we talk with Sanjay Nath, Co-founder and Managing Partner of Blume Ventures, one of India’s leading early-stage venture funds. Sanjay also represents Blume on the boards of Arka Venture Labs and the Draper Venture Network. Blume focuses on Seed to Pre-Series A stages of funding and has made over 100 investments across its 10-year history across multiple funds. Sanjay has invested in and advises a wide portfolio of startups including GreyOrange Robotics, Dataweave, Locus, Tricog, LBB, Lulu, Lambdatest, TapChief (acquired by Unacademy), Nektar.ai, and Obviously.ai amongst others.</p><p>What is the trajectory for Indian startups expanding abroad? How do they start in India and move to the US and SEA? How can startups build and sell remotely and operate in a virtual world? What are the repercussions of localization when internationalization? Sanjay, as an active investor in the space, brings his experience in answering all these questions and more!</p><p>Sign up for Chinaccelerator 20 Demo Day Nov 24 at <a href="https://www.eventbrite.com/e/chinaccelerator-demo-day-20-livestream-20-tickets-188035859317?aff=podcast">https://www.eventbrite.com/e/chinaccelerator-demo-day-20-livestream-20-tickets-188035859317?aff=podcast</a></p><p><strong>Show Notes</strong></p><p>02:10 Introduction to Sanjay Nath<br />02:55 Sanjay’s transition from consulting to VC<br />07:41 The trend of Indian startups expanding overseas<br />11:20 Overcoming the barriers of  cross-border expansion<br />16:38 How Blume VC supports startups with their expertise and best practices<br />24:10 Localisation vs Internationalisation from Day 1<br />28:22 Popular revenue models among Indian startups<br />31:04 The second-order effect of Covid19 on cross-border expansion<br />38:22 Opportunities for Indian SaaS companies in China<br />41:05 Leveraging diaspora and ecosystems to expand to the US and Europe<br />45:17 Sanjay’s final thoughts </p><p>Many thanks to our guests <strong> Sanjay Nath</strong>; host <strong>Oscar Ramos</strong>; producers <strong>Eva Shi</strong> and  <strong>Sagar Chaudhary</strong>; editor <strong>David Xu</strong>; organizer <strong>Chinaccelerator</strong>; and sponsor<strong> People Squared</strong>. Be sure to check out our website <a href="https://chinaccelerator.com/"><strong>www.chinaccelerator.com</strong></a></p><p>Share, subscribe, review, enjoy!</p><p>To join our listener group on WeChat, please add SOSV Helper (WeChat ID: sosvhero) and ask for the group  invitation.</p><p>To subscribe to our newsletter, please visit  www.asiastartuppulse.com</p><p>Follow us on LinkedIn:  <a href="https://www.linkedin.com/company/asia-startup-pulse/">https://www.linkedin.com/company/asia-startup-pulse</a></p><p>Email us: <a href="mailto:asp-team@asiastartuppulse.com" target="_blank">asp-team@asiastartuppulse.com</a></p>
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      <itunes:title>Inside the VC Mind: Technification in South Asia: Internationalisation of Indian SaaS Startups, with Sanjay Nath, Co-founder and Managing Partner of Blume Ventures (rebroadcast)</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>SOSV, Chinaccelerator</itunes:author>
      <itunes:duration>00:48:04</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>India today is home to some of the most innovative and valuable startups in the world. With a thriving startup ecosystem that is seeing more and more foreign capital injection and innovation across the board from tech to business models, Indian startups are well positioned to take on the global startup ecosystem. Although the domestic market is already huge enough, more Indian SaaS startups are venturing out and expanding across borders. 

In today’s episode, we talk with Sanjay Nath, Co-founder and Managing Partner of Blume Ventures, one of India’s leading early-stage venture funds. Sanjay also represents Blume on the boards of Arka Venture Labs and the Draper Venture Network. Blume focuses on Seed to Pre-Series A stages of funding and has made over 100 investments across its 10-year history across multiple funds. Sanjay has invested in and advises a wide portfolio of startups including GreyOrange Robotics, Dataweave, Locus, Tricog, LBB, Lulu, Lambdatest, TapChief (acquired by Unacademy), Nektar.ai, and Obviously.ai amongst others.

What is the trajectory for Indian startups expanding abroad? How do they start in India and move to US and SEA? How can startups build and sell remotely and operate in a virtual world? What are the repercussions of localization when internationalization? Sanjay, as an active investor in the space, brings his experience in answering all these questions and more!</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>India today is home to some of the most innovative and valuable startups in the world. With a thriving startup ecosystem that is seeing more and more foreign capital injection and innovation across the board from tech to business models, Indian startups are well positioned to take on the global startup ecosystem. Although the domestic market is already huge enough, more Indian SaaS startups are venturing out and expanding across borders. 

In today’s episode, we talk with Sanjay Nath, Co-founder and Managing Partner of Blume Ventures, one of India’s leading early-stage venture funds. Sanjay also represents Blume on the boards of Arka Venture Labs and the Draper Venture Network. Blume focuses on Seed to Pre-Series A stages of funding and has made over 100 investments across its 10-year history across multiple funds. Sanjay has invested in and advises a wide portfolio of startups including GreyOrange Robotics, Dataweave, Locus, Tricog, LBB, Lulu, Lambdatest, TapChief (acquired by Unacademy), Nektar.ai, and Obviously.ai amongst others.

What is the trajectory for Indian startups expanding abroad? How do they start in India and move to US and SEA? How can startups build and sell remotely and operate in a virtual world? What are the repercussions of localization when internationalization? Sanjay, as an active investor in the space, brings his experience in answering all these questions and more!</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>crossborder internet, blume ventures, india startups, vc, unacademy, internationalization, crossborder saas, southeast asia, india, venture capital, crossborder, enterprise software, startups, seed, earlystage, investment</itunes:keywords>
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      <itunes:episode>176</itunes:episode>
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      <title>Inside the VC Mind: Technification in SEA - Examining the Fundamentals of the Marketplace Business Model with James Tan, Managing Partner at Quest Ventures (rebroadcast)</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>In this episode, we go deep into marketplaces  with James Tan, Managing Partner at Quest Ventures. James  was co-founder and COO of 55tuan, a NASDAQ listed e-commerce group that grew to more than 200 cities and 5,000 employees across China. <br /><br />Sign up for Chinaccelerator 20 Demo Day Nov 24 at <a href="https://www.eventbrite.com/e/chinaccelerator-demo-day-20-livestream-20-tickets-188035859317?aff=podcast">https://www.eventbrite.com/e/chinaccelerator-demo-day-20-livestream-20-tickets-188035859317?aff=podcast</a></p><p>Show notes:</p><p>2:43 - Introduction to James Tan<br />4:21 -  Transition from startup founder to venture capitalist<br />6:06 - Introduction to Quest Ventures<br />7:20 -  Most rewarding achievements of running a marketplace<br />9:37 -  Why James is excited about marketplaces<br />12:23 -  The advantages of a marketplace over a B2C company<br />15:41 -  How to manage and control your marketplace<br />17:55 -  The most innovative marketplace models that James has seen<br />20:28 - Is a marketplace in Southeast Asia a regional business?<br />23:21 -  The right time for marketplaces to internationalise<br />25:53 -  How should companies localise in Indonesia?<br />31:31 - Where should Indonesian companies internationalise to<br />34:13  - When should companies reconsider expansion<br />35:13  - How to innovate the marketplace revenue model?<br />40:11  - Does “marketplace” have a higher valuation multiple compared to e-commerce?<br /><br />Follow us on LinkedIn:  <a href="https://www.linkedin.com/company/asia-startup-pulse/" target="_blank">https://www.linkedin.com/company/asia-startup-pulse</a><br />To join our listener group on WeChat, please add SOSV Helper (WeChat ID: sosvhero) and ask for the group invitation.<br />Email us: <a href="mailto:asp-team@asiastartuppulse.com" target="_blank">asp-team@asiastartuppulse.com</a><br /><br />Many thanks to our guest <strong> James Tan</strong>; host <strong>Oscar Ramos</strong>; producers <strong>Eva Shi</strong> and  <strong>Sagar Chaudhary</strong>; editor <strong>David Xu</strong>; organizer <strong>Chinaccelerator</strong>; and sponsor<strong> People Squared</strong>. Be sure to check out our website <a href="https://chinaccelerator.com/"><strong>www.chinaccelerator.com</strong></a></p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Thu, 4 Nov 2021 14:26:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Chinaccelerator, SOSV)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>In this episode, we go deep into marketplaces  with James Tan, Managing Partner at Quest Ventures. James  was co-founder and COO of 55tuan, a NASDAQ listed e-commerce group that grew to more than 200 cities and 5,000 employees across China. <br /><br />Sign up for Chinaccelerator 20 Demo Day Nov 24 at <a href="https://www.eventbrite.com/e/chinaccelerator-demo-day-20-livestream-20-tickets-188035859317?aff=podcast">https://www.eventbrite.com/e/chinaccelerator-demo-day-20-livestream-20-tickets-188035859317?aff=podcast</a></p><p>Show notes:</p><p>2:43 - Introduction to James Tan<br />4:21 -  Transition from startup founder to venture capitalist<br />6:06 - Introduction to Quest Ventures<br />7:20 -  Most rewarding achievements of running a marketplace<br />9:37 -  Why James is excited about marketplaces<br />12:23 -  The advantages of a marketplace over a B2C company<br />15:41 -  How to manage and control your marketplace<br />17:55 -  The most innovative marketplace models that James has seen<br />20:28 - Is a marketplace in Southeast Asia a regional business?<br />23:21 -  The right time for marketplaces to internationalise<br />25:53 -  How should companies localise in Indonesia?<br />31:31 - Where should Indonesian companies internationalise to<br />34:13  - When should companies reconsider expansion<br />35:13  - How to innovate the marketplace revenue model?<br />40:11  - Does “marketplace” have a higher valuation multiple compared to e-commerce?<br /><br />Follow us on LinkedIn:  <a href="https://www.linkedin.com/company/asia-startup-pulse/" target="_blank">https://www.linkedin.com/company/asia-startup-pulse</a><br />To join our listener group on WeChat, please add SOSV Helper (WeChat ID: sosvhero) and ask for the group invitation.<br />Email us: <a href="mailto:asp-team@asiastartuppulse.com" target="_blank">asp-team@asiastartuppulse.com</a><br /><br />Many thanks to our guest <strong> James Tan</strong>; host <strong>Oscar Ramos</strong>; producers <strong>Eva Shi</strong> and  <strong>Sagar Chaudhary</strong>; editor <strong>David Xu</strong>; organizer <strong>Chinaccelerator</strong>; and sponsor<strong> People Squared</strong>. Be sure to check out our website <a href="https://chinaccelerator.com/"><strong>www.chinaccelerator.com</strong></a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>Inside the VC Mind: Technification in SEA - Examining the Fundamentals of the Marketplace Business Model with James Tan, Managing Partner at Quest Ventures (rebroadcast)</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Chinaccelerator, SOSV</itunes:author>
      <itunes:duration>00:42:20</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>Marketplace is one of the most common business models in Southeast Asia nowadays. In one of our previous episodes, we talked to Aaron Tan, founder of Carro, about how he has built one of the biggest used-car marketplaces in Southeast Asia. 

Today, we are going to dig deeper into marketplaces again with James Tan, Managing Partner at Quest Ventures. Prior to this, James was co-founder and COO of 55tuan, a NASDAQ listed e-commerce group that grew to more than 200 cities and 5,000 employees across China.

In this episode, we talk about all the business fundamentals of building a marketplace: from the advantages and challenges of building a marketplace to how to manage or control it, to the importance of timing in expanding to multiple markets. A someone who has built a successful e-commerce marketplace himself and invested in several more, James also shares the most innovative marketplace models in the market and how he believes the business model can be innovated. </itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>Marketplace is one of the most common business models in Southeast Asia nowadays. In one of our previous episodes, we talked to Aaron Tan, founder of Carro, about how he has built one of the biggest used-car marketplaces in Southeast Asia. 

Today, we are going to dig deeper into marketplaces again with James Tan, Managing Partner at Quest Ventures. Prior to this, James was co-founder and COO of 55tuan, a NASDAQ listed e-commerce group that grew to more than 200 cities and 5,000 employees across China.

In this episode, we talk about all the business fundamentals of building a marketplace: from the advantages and challenges of building a marketplace to how to manage or control it, to the importance of timing in expanding to multiple markets. A someone who has built a successful e-commerce marketplace himself and invested in several more, James also shares the most innovative marketplace models in the market and how he believes the business model can be innovated. </itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>accelerator, business model, investor, venture capitalist, entrepreneurship, indonesia, founder, internationalization, southeast asia, chinaccelerator, startup, venture capital, entrepreneur, innovation, quest ventures, marketplace, expansion, ecommerce</itunes:keywords>
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      <title>The Circular Economy in a World of Planned Obsolescence with Johnson Yeh, Founder and CEO of ROEHL</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>Having accomplished his goal of transforming the gaming industry, Johnson Yeh is now turning his attention to his long-time passion: circular economy and sustainability. He founded ROEHL to provide consumers with a more sustainable and convenient lifestyle, starting with a subscription-based home appliance service.</p><p>Johnson recently sat down with Oscar Ramos in our Shanghai recording studio. Listen for their discussion on:</p><ul><li>Why Johnson left his job at the summit of the gaming industry to pursue this mission</li><li>What we can do in a world of planned obsolescence</li><li>Economic benefits to a circular economy</li><li>How ROEHL is speeding up the rate of green-tech adoption, starting with air-purifying products</li><li>China’s leading position in green technology</li><li>The most exciting opportunities for new companies in the sector</li></ul><p><strong>About the speaker:</strong></p><p>Johnson Yeh is the founder and CEO of ROEHL, the world’s first Lifestyle-as-a-Service (L.a.a.S) company. Before founding ROEHL in 2019, Johnson led Riot Games in China, Southeast Asia, and Japan. Under his leadership, LPL and e-sport went through a formidable transformation, becoming China's biggest spectator sport, with viewing numbers increasing by 15 times in 5 years. In 2019, the total number of hours watched reached 4 billion in China alone, surpassing CSL, NBA, and other traditional sporting events.</p><p>Many thanks to our guest <strong>Johnson Yeh</strong>; host <strong>Oscar Ramos</strong>; producers <strong>Sagar Chaudhary </strong>and <strong>Lace Nguyen</strong>; editor <strong>David Xu</strong>; organizer <strong>Chinaccelerator</strong>; and sponsor <strong>People Squared</strong>. Be sure to check out our website <a href="http://www.chinaccelerator.com/" target="_blank">www.chinaccelerator.com</a>.</p><p>To join our listener group on WeChat, please add SOSV Helper (WeChat ID: sosvhero) and ask for the group invitation.</p><p>Follow us on LinkedIn:  <a href="https://www.linkedin.com/company/asia-startup-pulse/" target="_blank">https://www.linkedin.com/company/asia-startup-pulse</a></p><p>Email us: <a href="mailto:asp-team@asiastartuppulse.com" target="_blank">asp-team@asiastartuppulse.com</a></p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Thu, 16 Sep 2021 14:12:51 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (sosv, chinaccelerator)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Having accomplished his goal of transforming the gaming industry, Johnson Yeh is now turning his attention to his long-time passion: circular economy and sustainability. He founded ROEHL to provide consumers with a more sustainable and convenient lifestyle, starting with a subscription-based home appliance service.</p><p>Johnson recently sat down with Oscar Ramos in our Shanghai recording studio. Listen for their discussion on:</p><ul><li>Why Johnson left his job at the summit of the gaming industry to pursue this mission</li><li>What we can do in a world of planned obsolescence</li><li>Economic benefits to a circular economy</li><li>How ROEHL is speeding up the rate of green-tech adoption, starting with air-purifying products</li><li>China’s leading position in green technology</li><li>The most exciting opportunities for new companies in the sector</li></ul><p><strong>About the speaker:</strong></p><p>Johnson Yeh is the founder and CEO of ROEHL, the world’s first Lifestyle-as-a-Service (L.a.a.S) company. Before founding ROEHL in 2019, Johnson led Riot Games in China, Southeast Asia, and Japan. Under his leadership, LPL and e-sport went through a formidable transformation, becoming China's biggest spectator sport, with viewing numbers increasing by 15 times in 5 years. In 2019, the total number of hours watched reached 4 billion in China alone, surpassing CSL, NBA, and other traditional sporting events.</p><p>Many thanks to our guest <strong>Johnson Yeh</strong>; host <strong>Oscar Ramos</strong>; producers <strong>Sagar Chaudhary </strong>and <strong>Lace Nguyen</strong>; editor <strong>David Xu</strong>; organizer <strong>Chinaccelerator</strong>; and sponsor <strong>People Squared</strong>. Be sure to check out our website <a href="http://www.chinaccelerator.com/" target="_blank">www.chinaccelerator.com</a>.</p><p>To join our listener group on WeChat, please add SOSV Helper (WeChat ID: sosvhero) and ask for the group invitation.</p><p>Follow us on LinkedIn:  <a href="https://www.linkedin.com/company/asia-startup-pulse/" target="_blank">https://www.linkedin.com/company/asia-startup-pulse</a></p><p>Email us: <a href="mailto:asp-team@asiastartuppulse.com" target="_blank">asp-team@asiastartuppulse.com</a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>The Circular Economy in a World of Planned Obsolescence with Johnson Yeh, Founder and CEO of ROEHL</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>sosv, chinaccelerator</itunes:author>
      <itunes:duration>00:34:52</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>Johnson Yeh discusses why he left his job at the summit of the gaming industry to pursue his long-time passion: circular economy and sustainability. In 2019 Johnson founded ROEHL to provide consumers with a more sustainable and convenient lifestyle, starting with a subscription-based home appliance service.</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>Johnson Yeh discusses why he left his job at the summit of the gaming industry to pursue his long-time passion: circular economy and sustainability. In 2019 Johnson founded ROEHL to provide consumers with a more sustainable and convenient lifestyle, starting with a subscription-based home appliance service.</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>china, southeast asia, roehl, japan, johnson yeh, sustainability, circular economy</itunes:keywords>
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      <title>The Uberization of Drone Tech with Kamarul Muhamed, Founder and CEO of Aerodyne Group</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>“Drones, in itself, is just a dumb flying platform. What makes it intelligent is the analytics and smart sensors; and how that can be disruptive in providing real value to our enterprise clients,” said Kamarul Muhamed, who founded Aerodyne in 2014 and has grown the company into a world-leading drone-based enterprise solutions provider and, more importantly, a pioneer in the use of AI for large-scale data operations and process optimization. Today, we sat down with Kamarul to talk all things drones, the Uberization of agritech, how drone tech has created a new market for technology talents. We also discussed why Southeast Asia, once dominated by traditional agriculture, is so bullish on new technologies, and the wonderful future of the region’s home-grown unicorns. </p><p><br /><strong>About the speaker:</strong></p><p>Kamarul Muhamed left the corporate world to pursue his passion in technology and digital innovation, founding Aerodyne in 2014 with a specialty in aerial imagery. The company has since pivoted to data intelligence, integrated solutions and now, Drone Tech, Data Tech and Digital Transformation (DT3). Ranked second in the world by Drone Industry Insights of Germany, Aerodyne has over 400 drone professionals operating in the Unmanned Aerial Vehicle (UAS) services sector, managing more than 300,000 infrastructure assets with 110,000 flight operations across 35 countries globally.<br /> </p><p><strong>Show notes:</strong></p><p><strong>01:39</strong> Introduction to Kamarul Muhamed and Aerodyne Group<br /><strong>02:29</strong> How the pandemic has accelerated the adoption of agritech<br /><strong>05:52</strong> Contactless technologies to automate infrastructure operations for powerlining and solar farms<br /><strong>07:15</strong> Transforming traditional labor-intensive agriculture jobs into tech talents<br /><strong>10:15</strong> How the Uberization of agritech has created a new micro-economy<br /><strong>13:05</strong> Southeast Asia’s governments are already channeling agriculture subsidy into the adoption of technology<br /><strong>18:36</strong> How Aerodyne tackled the challenges of adoption and scaling a cross-border team<br /><strong>22:00</strong> The future of aerial robotics and AI’s pivotal role in the ecosystem<br /><strong>26:40</strong> Entering the bigger B2C market with the super-app model for agriculture<br /><strong>32:35 </strong>What the world can learn from China’s speed of innovation and Southeast Asia’s massive opportunities<br /><br />Many thanks to our guests <strong>Kamarul Muhamed</strong>; host <strong>Oscar Ramos</strong>; producers <strong>Sagar Chaudhary </strong>and <strong>Lace Nguyen</strong>; editor <strong>David</strong>; organizer <strong>Chinaccelerator</strong>; and sponsor <strong>People Squared</strong>. Be sure to check out our website <a href="http://www.chinaccelerator.com/" target="_blank">www.chinaccelerator.com</a>.</p><p>To join our listener group on WeChat, please add SOSV Helper (WeChat ID: sosvhero) and ask for the group invitation.</p><p>Follow us on LinkedIn:  <a href="https://www.linkedin.com/company/asia-startup-pulse/" target="_blank">https://www.linkedin.com/company/asia-startup-pulse</a></p><p>Email us: <a href="mailto:asp-team@asiastartuppulse.com" target="_blank">asp-team@asiastartuppulse.com</a></p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Thu, 26 Aug 2021 14:17:05 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (SOSV, Chinaccelerator)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>“Drones, in itself, is just a dumb flying platform. What makes it intelligent is the analytics and smart sensors; and how that can be disruptive in providing real value to our enterprise clients,” said Kamarul Muhamed, who founded Aerodyne in 2014 and has grown the company into a world-leading drone-based enterprise solutions provider and, more importantly, a pioneer in the use of AI for large-scale data operations and process optimization. Today, we sat down with Kamarul to talk all things drones, the Uberization of agritech, how drone tech has created a new market for technology talents. We also discussed why Southeast Asia, once dominated by traditional agriculture, is so bullish on new technologies, and the wonderful future of the region’s home-grown unicorns. </p><p><br /><strong>About the speaker:</strong></p><p>Kamarul Muhamed left the corporate world to pursue his passion in technology and digital innovation, founding Aerodyne in 2014 with a specialty in aerial imagery. The company has since pivoted to data intelligence, integrated solutions and now, Drone Tech, Data Tech and Digital Transformation (DT3). Ranked second in the world by Drone Industry Insights of Germany, Aerodyne has over 400 drone professionals operating in the Unmanned Aerial Vehicle (UAS) services sector, managing more than 300,000 infrastructure assets with 110,000 flight operations across 35 countries globally.<br /> </p><p><strong>Show notes:</strong></p><p><strong>01:39</strong> Introduction to Kamarul Muhamed and Aerodyne Group<br /><strong>02:29</strong> How the pandemic has accelerated the adoption of agritech<br /><strong>05:52</strong> Contactless technologies to automate infrastructure operations for powerlining and solar farms<br /><strong>07:15</strong> Transforming traditional labor-intensive agriculture jobs into tech talents<br /><strong>10:15</strong> How the Uberization of agritech has created a new micro-economy<br /><strong>13:05</strong> Southeast Asia’s governments are already channeling agriculture subsidy into the adoption of technology<br /><strong>18:36</strong> How Aerodyne tackled the challenges of adoption and scaling a cross-border team<br /><strong>22:00</strong> The future of aerial robotics and AI’s pivotal role in the ecosystem<br /><strong>26:40</strong> Entering the bigger B2C market with the super-app model for agriculture<br /><strong>32:35 </strong>What the world can learn from China’s speed of innovation and Southeast Asia’s massive opportunities<br /><br />Many thanks to our guests <strong>Kamarul Muhamed</strong>; host <strong>Oscar Ramos</strong>; producers <strong>Sagar Chaudhary </strong>and <strong>Lace Nguyen</strong>; editor <strong>David</strong>; organizer <strong>Chinaccelerator</strong>; and sponsor <strong>People Squared</strong>. Be sure to check out our website <a href="http://www.chinaccelerator.com/" target="_blank">www.chinaccelerator.com</a>.</p><p>To join our listener group on WeChat, please add SOSV Helper (WeChat ID: sosvhero) and ask for the group invitation.</p><p>Follow us on LinkedIn:  <a href="https://www.linkedin.com/company/asia-startup-pulse/" target="_blank">https://www.linkedin.com/company/asia-startup-pulse</a></p><p>Email us: <a href="mailto:asp-team@asiastartuppulse.com" target="_blank">asp-team@asiastartuppulse.com</a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>The Uberization of Drone Tech with Kamarul Muhamed, Founder and CEO of Aerodyne Group</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>SOSV, Chinaccelerator</itunes:author>
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      <itunes:summary>We sat down with Kamarul Muhamed, founder and CEO of Aerodyne Group, a world-leading drone-based enterprise solutions provider, to talk all things drones, the Uberization of agritech, how drone tech has created a new market for technology talents. We also discussed why Southeast Asia, once dominated by traditional agriculture, is so bullish on new technologies, and the wonderful future of the region’s home-grown unicorns. </itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>We sat down with Kamarul Muhamed, founder and CEO of Aerodyne Group, a world-leading drone-based enterprise solutions provider, to talk all things drones, the Uberization of agritech, how drone tech has created a new market for technology talents. We also discussed why Southeast Asia, once dominated by traditional agriculture, is so bullish on new technologies, and the wonderful future of the region’s home-grown unicorns. </itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>drone, southeast asia, agritech, kamarul muhamed, aerial technology, aerodyne, digital transformation, robotics, data technology</itunes:keywords>
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      <title>The Future of NFTs Beyond Collectibles, w/ Robby Yung, Co-founder and CEO of Animoca Brands</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>Robby Yung is the CEO of Animoca Brands, the developer of a broad portfolio of blockchain games, traditional games, and other products, many of which are based on popular global brands including Formula 1®, Marvel, WWE, Power Rangers, MotoGP™, and Doraemon. Animoca Brands is also a prolific investor with more than 50 investments in NFT-related blockchain companies, including Sky Mavis (Axie Infinity), Dapper Labs (CryptoKitties and NBA Top Shot), OpenSea, Harmony, Bitski, and Alien Worlds. Yung previously was the co-founder of Redgate Media, acquired by Inno-Tech Holdings Limited. </p><p>Yung recently sat down with Oscar Ramos to talk about all things NFT, digital entertainment, and what excites him about the future of blockchain.</p><p><strong>Show Notes</strong></p><p><strong>02:35</strong> How Animoca made its foray into blockchain games with Dapper Labs and CryptoKitties<br /><strong>04:25</strong> How blockchain revolutionizes gaming with digital ownership<br /><strong>09:02</strong> Incentives for people to spend more money on blockchain games<br /><strong>11:24</strong> A fully decentralized game is a lot like a democracy<br /><strong>12:50</strong> Behind the rise of NFTs: companies at the intersection of gaming and DeFi such as Sky Mavis<br /><strong>15:52</strong> Could blockchain the third tech revolution?<br /><strong>19:11</strong> Robby Yung's investment philosophy<br /><strong>22:15</strong> How virtual experiences will change the traditional business model<br /><strong>24:21</strong> What we need to speed up blockchain adoption<br /><strong>27:27 </strong>Why regulations will increase clarity and transparency<br /><strong>32:16 </strong>The attraction of collectibles and art<br /><strong>36:05 </strong>The metaverse 10 years from now</p><p><br />Many thanks to our guests <strong>Robby Yung</strong>; host <strong>Oscar Ramos</strong>; producers <strong>Sagar Chaudhary </strong>and <strong>Lace Nguyen</strong>; editor <strong>David</strong>; organizer <strong>Chinaccelerator</strong>; and sponsor <strong>People Squared</strong>. Be sure to check out our website <a href="http://www.chinaccelerator.com/" target="_blank">www.chinaccelerator.com</a>.</p><p>To join our listener group on WeChat, please add SOSV Helper (WeChat ID: sosvhero) and ask for the group invitation.</p><p>Follow us on LinkedIn:  <a href="https://www.linkedin.com/company/asia-startup-pulse/" target="_blank">https://www.linkedin.com/company/asia-startup-pulse</a></p><p>Email us: <a href="mailto:asp-team@asiastartuppulse.com" target="_blank">asp-team@asiastartuppulse.com</a></p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Thu, 5 Aug 2021 13:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Chinaccelerator)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Robby Yung is the CEO of Animoca Brands, the developer of a broad portfolio of blockchain games, traditional games, and other products, many of which are based on popular global brands including Formula 1®, Marvel, WWE, Power Rangers, MotoGP™, and Doraemon. Animoca Brands is also a prolific investor with more than 50 investments in NFT-related blockchain companies, including Sky Mavis (Axie Infinity), Dapper Labs (CryptoKitties and NBA Top Shot), OpenSea, Harmony, Bitski, and Alien Worlds. Yung previously was the co-founder of Redgate Media, acquired by Inno-Tech Holdings Limited. </p><p>Yung recently sat down with Oscar Ramos to talk about all things NFT, digital entertainment, and what excites him about the future of blockchain.</p><p><strong>Show Notes</strong></p><p><strong>02:35</strong> How Animoca made its foray into blockchain games with Dapper Labs and CryptoKitties<br /><strong>04:25</strong> How blockchain revolutionizes gaming with digital ownership<br /><strong>09:02</strong> Incentives for people to spend more money on blockchain games<br /><strong>11:24</strong> A fully decentralized game is a lot like a democracy<br /><strong>12:50</strong> Behind the rise of NFTs: companies at the intersection of gaming and DeFi such as Sky Mavis<br /><strong>15:52</strong> Could blockchain the third tech revolution?<br /><strong>19:11</strong> Robby Yung's investment philosophy<br /><strong>22:15</strong> How virtual experiences will change the traditional business model<br /><strong>24:21</strong> What we need to speed up blockchain adoption<br /><strong>27:27 </strong>Why regulations will increase clarity and transparency<br /><strong>32:16 </strong>The attraction of collectibles and art<br /><strong>36:05 </strong>The metaverse 10 years from now</p><p><br />Many thanks to our guests <strong>Robby Yung</strong>; host <strong>Oscar Ramos</strong>; producers <strong>Sagar Chaudhary </strong>and <strong>Lace Nguyen</strong>; editor <strong>David</strong>; organizer <strong>Chinaccelerator</strong>; and sponsor <strong>People Squared</strong>. Be sure to check out our website <a href="http://www.chinaccelerator.com/" target="_blank">www.chinaccelerator.com</a>.</p><p>To join our listener group on WeChat, please add SOSV Helper (WeChat ID: sosvhero) and ask for the group invitation.</p><p>Follow us on LinkedIn:  <a href="https://www.linkedin.com/company/asia-startup-pulse/" target="_blank">https://www.linkedin.com/company/asia-startup-pulse</a></p><p>Email us: <a href="mailto:asp-team@asiastartuppulse.com" target="_blank">asp-team@asiastartuppulse.com</a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>The Future of NFTs Beyond Collectibles, w/ Robby Yung, Co-founder and CEO of Animoca Brands</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Chinaccelerator</itunes:author>
      <itunes:duration>00:38:36</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>The World Wide Web was the first big tech revolution. Mobile was the second and we think blockchain is now the third. This is a period where we&apos;re going to have a solid 10-year run of tremendous growth and adoption of this new technology. It&apos;s going to bring enormous changes to all sectors that the technology touches upon: entertainment, financial services, e-government, and more.</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>The World Wide Web was the first big tech revolution. Mobile was the second and we think blockchain is now the third. This is a period where we&apos;re going to have a solid 10-year run of tremendous growth and adoption of this new technology. It&apos;s going to bring enormous changes to all sectors that the technology touches upon: entertainment, financial services, e-government, and more.</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>cryptokitties, nft, collectibles, axie infinity, robby yung, blockchain, gaming, animoca brands</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:episode>172</itunes:episode>
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      <title>Understanding the business model behind open-source services w/ Neil Han, Head of APAC for PingCAP [World’s most valued NewSQL company]</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>The open-source model has been a big catalyst for technology businesses across the world. While it is clear how they fit into other business models, it is still unclear what the business model behind an open-source business is. In this episode, we aim to answer that and more. We invited Neil Han, Head of APAC and EMEA for PingCAP, the first open-source unicorn in China, which raised 340million USD in total. Neil is a hardcore software person and a well-connected professional in the software industry across the globe with great operations and management skillset, looking forward to working with a fast-growing company and great leadership team to grow together.</p><p><br /> </p><p><strong>Show Notes:</strong></p><p>[1:26] Introduction to Neil Han</p><p>[2:39] PingCap’s value proposition</p><p>[5:14] Companies that best leverage PingCap’s services</p><p>[8:05] The business model behind an open source business</p><p>[12:08] Where the community contributors come from</p><p>[15:05] Where the customers come from</p><p>[17:29] Experience of selling the service to Chinese customers</p><p>[2200] Customers as contributors to the product: A case of Square</p><p>[26:38] The scope of growth for open-source software in APAC</p><p>[30:16] Connect with Neil</p><p> </p><p>Many thanks to our guests <strong> Neil Han</strong>; host <strong>Oscar Ramos</strong>; producers <strong>Eva Shi</strong> and  <strong>Sagar Chaudhary</strong>; editor <strong>David</strong>; organizer <strong>Chinaccelerator</strong>; and sponsor<strong> People Squared</strong>. Be sure to check out our website <a href="https://chinaccelerator.com/"><strong>www.chinaccelerator.com</strong></a></p><p>Share, subscribe, review, enjoy!</p><p>To join our listener group on WeChat, please add SOSV Helper (WeChat ID: sosvhero) and ask for the group  invitation.</p><p>To subscribe to our newsletter, please visit  www.asiastartuppulse.com</p><p>Follow us on LinkedIn:  <a href="https://www.linkedin.com/company/asia-startup-pulse/">https://www.linkedin.com/company/asia-startup-pulse</a></p><p>Email us: <a href="mailto:asp-team@asiastartuppulse.com" target="_blank">asp-team@asiastartuppulse.com</a></p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Thu, 29 Jul 2021 11:30:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Chinaccelerator)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The open-source model has been a big catalyst for technology businesses across the world. While it is clear how they fit into other business models, it is still unclear what the business model behind an open-source business is. In this episode, we aim to answer that and more. We invited Neil Han, Head of APAC and EMEA for PingCAP, the first open-source unicorn in China, which raised 340million USD in total. Neil is a hardcore software person and a well-connected professional in the software industry across the globe with great operations and management skillset, looking forward to working with a fast-growing company and great leadership team to grow together.</p><p><br /> </p><p><strong>Show Notes:</strong></p><p>[1:26] Introduction to Neil Han</p><p>[2:39] PingCap’s value proposition</p><p>[5:14] Companies that best leverage PingCap’s services</p><p>[8:05] The business model behind an open source business</p><p>[12:08] Where the community contributors come from</p><p>[15:05] Where the customers come from</p><p>[17:29] Experience of selling the service to Chinese customers</p><p>[2200] Customers as contributors to the product: A case of Square</p><p>[26:38] The scope of growth for open-source software in APAC</p><p>[30:16] Connect with Neil</p><p> </p><p>Many thanks to our guests <strong> Neil Han</strong>; host <strong>Oscar Ramos</strong>; producers <strong>Eva Shi</strong> and  <strong>Sagar Chaudhary</strong>; editor <strong>David</strong>; organizer <strong>Chinaccelerator</strong>; and sponsor<strong> People Squared</strong>. Be sure to check out our website <a href="https://chinaccelerator.com/"><strong>www.chinaccelerator.com</strong></a></p><p>Share, subscribe, review, enjoy!</p><p>To join our listener group on WeChat, please add SOSV Helper (WeChat ID: sosvhero) and ask for the group  invitation.</p><p>To subscribe to our newsletter, please visit  www.asiastartuppulse.com</p><p>Follow us on LinkedIn:  <a href="https://www.linkedin.com/company/asia-startup-pulse/">https://www.linkedin.com/company/asia-startup-pulse</a></p><p>Email us: <a href="mailto:asp-team@asiastartuppulse.com" target="_blank">asp-team@asiastartuppulse.com</a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>Understanding the business model behind open-source services w/ Neil Han, Head of APAC for PingCAP [World’s most valued NewSQL company]</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Chinaccelerator</itunes:author>
      <itunes:duration>00:31:34</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>The open-source model has been a big catalyst for technology businesses across the world. While it is clear how they fit into other business models, it is still unclear what the business model behind an open-source business is. In this episode, we aim to answer that and more. We invited Neil Han, Head of APAC and EMEA for PingCAP, the first open-source unicorn in China, which raised 340million USD in total. Neil is a hardcore software person and a well-connected professional in the software industry across the globe with great operations and management skillset, looking forward to working with a fast-growing company and great leadership team to grow together. 

PingCAP raises $270M in Nov. 2020 to develop core technologies and advance the global expansion of its offerings! 

PingCAP is founded by the team that built TiDB, a world-leading open-source, cloud-native, distributed SQL/NewSQL database for elastic scale and real-time analytics, which is compatible with MySQL and enables companies to painlessly scale their business while keeping the underlying infrastructure simple and serve as a one-stop solution for all online transactions and analysis. PingCAP is the most valued NewSQL company on the planet!
</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>The open-source model has been a big catalyst for technology businesses across the world. While it is clear how they fit into other business models, it is still unclear what the business model behind an open-source business is. In this episode, we aim to answer that and more. We invited Neil Han, Head of APAC and EMEA for PingCAP, the first open-source unicorn in China, which raised 340million USD in total. Neil is a hardcore software person and a well-connected professional in the software industry across the globe with great operations and management skillset, looking forward to working with a fast-growing company and great leadership team to grow together. 

PingCAP raises $270M in Nov. 2020 to develop core technologies and advance the global expansion of its offerings! 

PingCAP is founded by the team that built TiDB, a world-leading open-source, cloud-native, distributed SQL/NewSQL database for elastic scale and real-time analytics, which is compatible with MySQL and enables companies to painlessly scale their business while keeping the underlying infrastructure simple and serve as a one-stop solution for all online transactions and analysis. PingCAP is the most valued NewSQL company on the planet!
</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>accelerator, valuation, unicorn, business model, opensource platform, opensource, china, open-source, software, chinaccelerator, community, opensource software, crossborder, open-source platform</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
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      <itunes:episode>171</itunes:episode>
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      <title>Internationalisation of Indian SaaS Startups, with Sanjay Nath, Co-founder and Managing Partner of Blume Ventures</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>In today’s episode, we invite Sanjay Nath, Co-founder and Managing Partner of Blume Ventures, one of India’s leading early-stage venture funds. Sanjay also reprerepresents Blume on the boards of Arka Venture Labs and the Draper Venture Network. Blume focuses on Seed to Pre-Series A stages of funding and has made over 100 investments across its 10-year history across multiple funds. Sanjay has invested in and advises a wide portfolio of startups including GreyOrange Robotics, Dataweave, Locus, Tricog, LBB, Lulu, Lambdatest, TapChief (acquired by Unacademy), Nektar.ai, and Obviously.ai amongst others.</p><p>What is the trajectory for Indian startups expanding abroad? How do they start in India and move to the US and SEA? How can startups build and sell remotely and operate in a virtual world? What are the repercussions of localization when internationalization? Sanjay, as an active investor in the space, brings his experience in answering all these questions and more!</p><p> </p><p><strong>Show Notes</strong></p><p>01:35 Introduction to Sanjay Nath</p><p>02:20 Sanjay’s transition from consulting to VC</p><p>07:06 The trend of Indian startups expanding overseas</p><p>10:54 Overcoming the barriers of  cross-border expansion</p><p>16:03 How Blume VC supports startups with their expertise and best practices</p><p>23:35 Localisation vs Internationalisation from Day 1</p><p>27:47 Popular revenue models among Indian startups</p><p>30:29 The second-order effect of Covid19 on cross-border expansion</p><p>37:47 Opportunities for Indian SaaS companies in China</p><p>40:30 Leveraging diaspora and ecosystems to expand to the US and Europe</p><p>44:42 Sanjay’s final thoughts </p><p> </p><p>Many thanks to our guests <strong> Sanjay Nath</strong>; host <strong>Oscar Ramos</strong>; producers <strong>Eva Shi</strong> and  <strong>Sagar Chaudhary</strong>; editor <strong>David</strong>; organizer <strong>Chinaccelerator</strong>; and sponsor<strong> People Squared</strong>. Be sure to check out our website <a href="https://chinaccelerator.com/"><strong>www.chinaccelerator.com</strong></a></p><p>Share, subscribe, review, enjoy!</p><p>To join our listener group on WeChat, please add SOSV Helper (WeChat ID: sosvhero) and ask for the group  invitation.</p><p>To subscribe to our newsletter, please visit  www.asiastartuppulse.com</p><p>Follow us on LinkedIn:  <a href="https://www.linkedin.com/company/asia-startup-pulse/">https://www.linkedin.com/company/asia-startup-pulse</a></p><p>Email us: <a href="mailto:asp-team@asiastartuppulse.com" target="_blank">asp-team@asiastartuppulse.com</a></p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Fri, 16 Jul 2021 12:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Chinaccelerator, SOSV)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>In today’s episode, we invite Sanjay Nath, Co-founder and Managing Partner of Blume Ventures, one of India’s leading early-stage venture funds. Sanjay also reprerepresents Blume on the boards of Arka Venture Labs and the Draper Venture Network. Blume focuses on Seed to Pre-Series A stages of funding and has made over 100 investments across its 10-year history across multiple funds. Sanjay has invested in and advises a wide portfolio of startups including GreyOrange Robotics, Dataweave, Locus, Tricog, LBB, Lulu, Lambdatest, TapChief (acquired by Unacademy), Nektar.ai, and Obviously.ai amongst others.</p><p>What is the trajectory for Indian startups expanding abroad? How do they start in India and move to the US and SEA? How can startups build and sell remotely and operate in a virtual world? What are the repercussions of localization when internationalization? Sanjay, as an active investor in the space, brings his experience in answering all these questions and more!</p><p> </p><p><strong>Show Notes</strong></p><p>01:35 Introduction to Sanjay Nath</p><p>02:20 Sanjay’s transition from consulting to VC</p><p>07:06 The trend of Indian startups expanding overseas</p><p>10:54 Overcoming the barriers of  cross-border expansion</p><p>16:03 How Blume VC supports startups with their expertise and best practices</p><p>23:35 Localisation vs Internationalisation from Day 1</p><p>27:47 Popular revenue models among Indian startups</p><p>30:29 The second-order effect of Covid19 on cross-border expansion</p><p>37:47 Opportunities for Indian SaaS companies in China</p><p>40:30 Leveraging diaspora and ecosystems to expand to the US and Europe</p><p>44:42 Sanjay’s final thoughts </p><p> </p><p>Many thanks to our guests <strong> Sanjay Nath</strong>; host <strong>Oscar Ramos</strong>; producers <strong>Eva Shi</strong> and  <strong>Sagar Chaudhary</strong>; editor <strong>David</strong>; organizer <strong>Chinaccelerator</strong>; and sponsor<strong> People Squared</strong>. Be sure to check out our website <a href="https://chinaccelerator.com/"><strong>www.chinaccelerator.com</strong></a></p><p>Share, subscribe, review, enjoy!</p><p>To join our listener group on WeChat, please add SOSV Helper (WeChat ID: sosvhero) and ask for the group  invitation.</p><p>To subscribe to our newsletter, please visit  www.asiastartuppulse.com</p><p>Follow us on LinkedIn:  <a href="https://www.linkedin.com/company/asia-startup-pulse/">https://www.linkedin.com/company/asia-startup-pulse</a></p><p>Email us: <a href="mailto:asp-team@asiastartuppulse.com" target="_blank">asp-team@asiastartuppulse.com</a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>Internationalisation of Indian SaaS Startups, with Sanjay Nath, Co-founder and Managing Partner of Blume Ventures</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Chinaccelerator, SOSV</itunes:author>
      <itunes:duration>00:47:31</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>India today is home to some of the most innovative and valuable startups in the world. With a thriving startup ecosystem that is seeing more and more foreign capital injection and innovation across the board from tech to business models, Indian startups are well positioned to take on the global startup ecosystem. Although the domestic market is already huge enough, more Indian SaaS startups are venturing out and expanding across borders. 

In today’s episode, we invite Sanjay Nath, Co-founder and Managing Partner of Blume Ventures, one of India’s leading early-stage venture funds. Sanjay also reprerepresents Blume on the boards of Arka Venture Labs and the Draper Venture Network. Blume focuses on Seed to Pre-Series A stages of funding and has made over 100 investments across its 10-year history across multiple funds. Sanjay has invested in and advises a wide portfolio of startups including GreyOrange Robotics, Dataweave, Locus, Tricog, LBB, Lulu, Lambdatest, TapChief (acquired by Unacademy), Nektar.ai, and Obviously.ai amongst others.

What is the trajectory for Indian startups expanding abroad? How do they start in India and move to US and SEA? How can startups build and sell remotely and operate in a virtual world? What are the repercussions of localization when internationalization? Sanjay, as an active investor in the space, brings his experience in answering all these questions and more!</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>India today is home to some of the most innovative and valuable startups in the world. With a thriving startup ecosystem that is seeing more and more foreign capital injection and innovation across the board from tech to business models, Indian startups are well positioned to take on the global startup ecosystem. Although the domestic market is already huge enough, more Indian SaaS startups are venturing out and expanding across borders. 

In today’s episode, we invite Sanjay Nath, Co-founder and Managing Partner of Blume Ventures, one of India’s leading early-stage venture funds. Sanjay also reprerepresents Blume on the boards of Arka Venture Labs and the Draper Venture Network. Blume focuses on Seed to Pre-Series A stages of funding and has made over 100 investments across its 10-year history across multiple funds. Sanjay has invested in and advises a wide portfolio of startups including GreyOrange Robotics, Dataweave, Locus, Tricog, LBB, Lulu, Lambdatest, TapChief (acquired by Unacademy), Nektar.ai, and Obviously.ai amongst others.

What is the trajectory for Indian startups expanding abroad? How do they start in India and move to US and SEA? How can startups build and sell remotely and operate in a virtual world? What are the repercussions of localization when internationalization? Sanjay, as an active investor in the space, brings his experience in answering all these questions and more!</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>crossborder internet, blume ventures, india startups, vc, unacademy, internationalization, crossborder saas, southeast asia, india, venture capital, crossborder, enterprise software, startups, seed, earlystage, investment</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
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      <itunes:episode>170</itunes:episode>
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      <title>How to Start a Venture Fund in China, with Chris Lerner, Managing Partner at MSA Capital</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>We invited Chris Lerner, Managing Partner at MSA Capital, to join us to share his experience on starting and running a successful venture fund, and also how MSA Capital has supported startups to grow and expand to different markets. Founded in 2014, MSA Capital is an independent global private equity and venture capital firm with over $1.5 billion assets under management. Most notably, 60% of its 26 early stage investments have become super unicorns.<br /> </p><p>We also extended the conversation from a “cross-border” perspective by discussing about the potential opportunities for foreign startups and foreign VCs to enter China.<br /> </p><p><strong>Show Notes:</strong></p><p>2:48 Introduction to MSA Capital</p><p>5:22 What has kept Chris Lerner living in China</p><p>9:12 What makes the Chinese VC industry different</p><p>13:10 The DNA of Chinese corporate VCs (CVCs)</p><p>15:13 Conflicts happen when startups work with different CVCs</p><p>17:38 What takes to launch a VC fund</p><p>19:57 Who is investing in VC funds in China</p><p>24:40 The difference between RMB funds and USD funds</p><p>27:44 How VC funds can exit themselves in China</p><p>31:38 The trends of consolidation for financial returns</p><p>33:18 What support MSA Capital provides to startups</p><p>38:13 Potential opportunities for foreign startups to enter China</p><p>41:18 The opportunity of foreign VCs to enter China</p><p>42:32 How to contact Chris Lerner</p><p> </p><p>Many thanks to our guests <strong>Chris Lerner</strong>; host <strong>Oscar Ramos</strong>; producers <strong>Eva Shi</strong> and  <strong>Sagar Chaudhary</strong>; editor <strong>David</strong>; organizer <strong>Chinaccelerator</strong>; and sponsor<strong> People Squared</strong>. Be sure to check out our website <a href="https://chinaccelerator.com/"><strong>www.chinaccelerator.com</strong></a></p><p>Share, subscribe, review, enjoy!</p><p>To join our listener group on WeChat, please add SOSV Helper (WeChat ID: sosvhero) and ask for the group  invitation.</p><p>To subscribe to our newsletter, please visit  www.asiastartuppulse.com</p><p>Follow us on LinkedIn:  <a href="https://www.linkedin.com/company/asia-startup-pulse/">https://www.linkedin.com/company/asia-startup-pulse</a></p><p>Email us: <a href="mailto:asp-team@asiastartuppulse.com" target="_blank">asp-team@asiastartuppulse.com</a></p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Fri, 9 Jul 2021 01:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (SOSV, Chinaccelerator)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>We invited Chris Lerner, Managing Partner at MSA Capital, to join us to share his experience on starting and running a successful venture fund, and also how MSA Capital has supported startups to grow and expand to different markets. Founded in 2014, MSA Capital is an independent global private equity and venture capital firm with over $1.5 billion assets under management. Most notably, 60% of its 26 early stage investments have become super unicorns.<br /> </p><p>We also extended the conversation from a “cross-border” perspective by discussing about the potential opportunities for foreign startups and foreign VCs to enter China.<br /> </p><p><strong>Show Notes:</strong></p><p>2:48 Introduction to MSA Capital</p><p>5:22 What has kept Chris Lerner living in China</p><p>9:12 What makes the Chinese VC industry different</p><p>13:10 The DNA of Chinese corporate VCs (CVCs)</p><p>15:13 Conflicts happen when startups work with different CVCs</p><p>17:38 What takes to launch a VC fund</p><p>19:57 Who is investing in VC funds in China</p><p>24:40 The difference between RMB funds and USD funds</p><p>27:44 How VC funds can exit themselves in China</p><p>31:38 The trends of consolidation for financial returns</p><p>33:18 What support MSA Capital provides to startups</p><p>38:13 Potential opportunities for foreign startups to enter China</p><p>41:18 The opportunity of foreign VCs to enter China</p><p>42:32 How to contact Chris Lerner</p><p> </p><p>Many thanks to our guests <strong>Chris Lerner</strong>; host <strong>Oscar Ramos</strong>; producers <strong>Eva Shi</strong> and  <strong>Sagar Chaudhary</strong>; editor <strong>David</strong>; organizer <strong>Chinaccelerator</strong>; and sponsor<strong> People Squared</strong>. Be sure to check out our website <a href="https://chinaccelerator.com/"><strong>www.chinaccelerator.com</strong></a></p><p>Share, subscribe, review, enjoy!</p><p>To join our listener group on WeChat, please add SOSV Helper (WeChat ID: sosvhero) and ask for the group  invitation.</p><p>To subscribe to our newsletter, please visit  www.asiastartuppulse.com</p><p>Follow us on LinkedIn:  <a href="https://www.linkedin.com/company/asia-startup-pulse/">https://www.linkedin.com/company/asia-startup-pulse</a></p><p>Email us: <a href="mailto:asp-team@asiastartuppulse.com" target="_blank">asp-team@asiastartuppulse.com</a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>How to Start a Venture Fund in China, with Chris Lerner, Managing Partner at MSA Capital</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>SOSV, Chinaccelerator</itunes:author>
      <itunes:duration>00:43:35</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>What does it take to launch a VC fund in China? What are the differences between RMB funds and USD funds? And how can VC funds exit themselves?

We invited Chris Lerner, Managing Partner at MSA Capital, to join us to share his experience on starting and running a successful venture fund, and also how MSA Capital has supported startups to grow and expand to different markets. Founded in 2014, MSA Capital is an independent global private equity and venture capital firm with over $1.5 billion assets under management. Most notably, 60% of its 26 early stage investments have become super unicorns.

We also extended the conversation from a “cross-border” perspective by discussing about the potential opportunities for foreign startups and foreign VCs to enter China.</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>What does it take to launch a VC fund in China? What are the differences between RMB funds and USD funds? And how can VC funds exit themselves?

We invited Chris Lerner, Managing Partner at MSA Capital, to join us to share his experience on starting and running a successful venture fund, and also how MSA Capital has supported startups to grow and expand to different markets. Founded in 2014, MSA Capital is an independent global private equity and venture capital firm with over $1.5 billion assets under management. Most notably, 60% of its 26 early stage investments have become super unicorns.

We also extended the conversation from a “cross-border” perspective by discussing about the potential opportunities for foreign startups and foreign VCs to enter China.</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>early stage startups, private equity, chinaccelerator, unicorns, sosv, cross-border, venture capital, msa capital, corporate vc, corporate venture capital, startups, usd fund, pe, fund, investment, rmb fund, overseas expansion</itunes:keywords>
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      <title>Building Bangladesh&apos;s Biggest Tech Startup with Hussain Elius, Founder and CEO of Pathao</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>While Southeast Asia remains one of the hottest markets in the region, South Asia is also catching up, especially with the likes of Bangladesh and Pakistan. The region is also home to some of the fastest-growing tech startups, and today, we venture down south to Bangladesh and talk to the co-founder and CEO of Pathao, Bangladesh's largest tech company which is valued at over $100 million. Pathao is the leading ride-sharing, on-demand logistics, and food delivery platform in Bangladesh. Today, its motorbike and car-hailing vertical alone serves five million riders across five cities in Bangladesh and Kathmandu in Nepal.</p><p>How did Pathao come into existence? For a market with typically no culture of motorcycle-taxis, how did you create the need in the market? How did they manage to stand out from the competition even against the likes of Uber? How has their journey been moving from an app to a super app? We talk about all these and more, in today’s episode.</p><p><strong>Show Notes</strong></p><p>02:20 Introduction to Hussain Elius</p><p>03:22 How Pathao came into existence</p><p>05:48 What the status quo was before Pathao</p><p>08:21 Inspiration behind founding Pathao</p><p>11:10 The competitive landscape for Pathao</p><p>13:50 The competition against Uber</p><p>17:20 Understanding why the “Uber-way” was not the way to go</p><p>22:37 Lessons learned from Gojek</p><p>25:30 Pathao’s expansion to Nepal</p><p>29:05 Evolution of Hussain’s role</p><p>32:43 Does mentorship matter?</p><p>36:03 Final thoughts</p><p> </p><p>Many thanks to our guests <strong> Hussain Elius</strong>; host <strong>Oscar Ramos</strong>; producers <strong>Eva Shi</strong> and  <strong>Sagar Chaudhary</strong>; editor <strong>David</strong>; organizer <strong>Chinaccelerator</strong>; and sponsor<strong> People Squared</strong>. Be sure to check out our website <a href="https://chinaccelerator.com/"><strong>www.chinaccelerator.com</strong></a></p><p>Share, subscribe, review, enjoy!</p><p>To join our listener group on WeChat, please add SOSV Helper (WeChat ID: sosvhero) and ask for the group  invitation.</p><p>To subscribe to our newsletter, please visit  www.asiastartuppulse.com</p><p>Follow us on LinkedIn:  <a href="https://www.linkedin.com/company/asia-startup-pulse/">https://www.linkedin.com/company/asia-startup-pulse</a></p><p>Email us: <a href="mailto:asp-team@asiastartuppulse.com" target="_blank">asp-team@asiastartuppulse.com</a></p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Thu, 1 Jul 2021 13:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Chinaccelerator)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>While Southeast Asia remains one of the hottest markets in the region, South Asia is also catching up, especially with the likes of Bangladesh and Pakistan. The region is also home to some of the fastest-growing tech startups, and today, we venture down south to Bangladesh and talk to the co-founder and CEO of Pathao, Bangladesh's largest tech company which is valued at over $100 million. Pathao is the leading ride-sharing, on-demand logistics, and food delivery platform in Bangladesh. Today, its motorbike and car-hailing vertical alone serves five million riders across five cities in Bangladesh and Kathmandu in Nepal.</p><p>How did Pathao come into existence? For a market with typically no culture of motorcycle-taxis, how did you create the need in the market? How did they manage to stand out from the competition even against the likes of Uber? How has their journey been moving from an app to a super app? We talk about all these and more, in today’s episode.</p><p><strong>Show Notes</strong></p><p>02:20 Introduction to Hussain Elius</p><p>03:22 How Pathao came into existence</p><p>05:48 What the status quo was before Pathao</p><p>08:21 Inspiration behind founding Pathao</p><p>11:10 The competitive landscape for Pathao</p><p>13:50 The competition against Uber</p><p>17:20 Understanding why the “Uber-way” was not the way to go</p><p>22:37 Lessons learned from Gojek</p><p>25:30 Pathao’s expansion to Nepal</p><p>29:05 Evolution of Hussain’s role</p><p>32:43 Does mentorship matter?</p><p>36:03 Final thoughts</p><p> </p><p>Many thanks to our guests <strong> Hussain Elius</strong>; host <strong>Oscar Ramos</strong>; producers <strong>Eva Shi</strong> and  <strong>Sagar Chaudhary</strong>; editor <strong>David</strong>; organizer <strong>Chinaccelerator</strong>; and sponsor<strong> People Squared</strong>. Be sure to check out our website <a href="https://chinaccelerator.com/"><strong>www.chinaccelerator.com</strong></a></p><p>Share, subscribe, review, enjoy!</p><p>To join our listener group on WeChat, please add SOSV Helper (WeChat ID: sosvhero) and ask for the group  invitation.</p><p>To subscribe to our newsletter, please visit  www.asiastartuppulse.com</p><p>Follow us on LinkedIn:  <a href="https://www.linkedin.com/company/asia-startup-pulse/">https://www.linkedin.com/company/asia-startup-pulse</a></p><p>Email us: <a href="mailto:asp-team@asiastartuppulse.com" target="_blank">asp-team@asiastartuppulse.com</a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>Building Bangladesh&apos;s Biggest Tech Startup with Hussain Elius, Founder and CEO of Pathao</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Chinaccelerator</itunes:author>
      <itunes:duration>00:39:31</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>While Southeast Asia remains one of the hottest markets in the region, South Asia is also catching up, especially with the likes of Bangladesh and Pakistan. The region is also home to some of the fastest-growing tech startups, and today, we venture down south to Bangladesh and talk to the co-founder and CEO of Pathao, Bangladesh&apos;s largest tech company which is valued at over $100 million. Pathao is the leading ride-sharing, on-demand logistics, and food delivery platform in Bangladesh. Today, its motorbike and car-hailing vertical alone serves five million riders across five cities in Bangladesh and Kathmandu in Nepal.</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>While Southeast Asia remains one of the hottest markets in the region, South Asia is also catching up, especially with the likes of Bangladesh and Pakistan. The region is also home to some of the fastest-growing tech startups, and today, we venture down south to Bangladesh and talk to the co-founder and CEO of Pathao, Bangladesh&apos;s largest tech company which is valued at over $100 million. Pathao is the leading ride-sharing, on-demand logistics, and food delivery platform in Bangladesh. Today, its motorbike and car-hailing vertical alone serves five million riders across five cities in Bangladesh and Kathmandu in Nepal.</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>china, southeast asia, chinaccelerator, superapp, pathao, tech startup, ridehailing, uber, bangladesh, gojek, tech, asia, app, super app, south asia</itunes:keywords>
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      <title>Understanding What Impact Investment Truly Is, w/ Ilaria Chan, Advisor on Tech &amp; Social Impact for Grab</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>In this episode, we are joined by Ilaria Chan, Advisor on Tech & Social Impact for Grab, one of Asia’s most prominent tech unicorns. Having started her career in investment banking with Goldman Sachs, today Ilaria is a global keynote speaker, private investor, and serves on the Board of Trustees of several humanitarian organizations. We talk all about impact investment and socially conscious startups and the investment ecosystem that revolves around them.</p><p><strong>SHOW NOTES</strong></p><p><strong>03:14</strong> Introduction to Ilaria Chan</p><p><strong>07:04</strong> Ilaria’s expertise in Impact Investment</p><p><strong>09:32</strong> Understanding the reality of Impact Invest and Difference between East & West</p><p><strong>14:50</strong> Impact vs Profitability: The quandary for social entrepreneurs for raising funds</p><p><strong>20:09</strong> How Tech Unicorns are making social impact a big of their proposition</p><p><strong>26:05</strong> Tangible impact vs Intangible Impact: Is one less important than the other?</p><p><strong>30:22</strong> The “green-washing” trend in impact investment</p><p><strong>34:41</strong> Flow of innovation from East to the West</p><p><strong>43:44</strong> Connect with Ilaria</p><p> </p><p>Many thanks to our guests <strong> Ilaria Chan</strong>; host <strong>Oscar Ramos</strong>; producers <strong>Eva Shi</strong> and  <strong>Sagar Chaudhary</strong>; editor <strong>David</strong>; organizer <strong>Chinaccelerator</strong>; and sponsor<strong> People Squared</strong>. Be sure to check out our website <a href="https://chinaccelerator.com/"><strong>www.chinaccelerator.com</strong></a></p><p>Share, subscribe, review, enjoy!</p><p>To join our listener group on WeChat, please add SOSV Helper (WeChat ID: sosvhero) and ask for the group  invitation.</p><p>To subscribe to our newsletter, please visit  www.asiastartuppulse.com</p><p>Follow us on LinkedIn:  <a href="https://www.linkedin.com/company/asia-startup-pulse/">https://www.linkedin.com/company/asia-startup-pulse</a></p><p>Email us: <a href="mailto:asp-team@asiastartuppulse.com" target="_blank">asp-team@asiastartuppulse.com</a></p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Thu, 10 Jun 2021 12:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (SOSV, Chinaccelerator)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>In this episode, we are joined by Ilaria Chan, Advisor on Tech & Social Impact for Grab, one of Asia’s most prominent tech unicorns. Having started her career in investment banking with Goldman Sachs, today Ilaria is a global keynote speaker, private investor, and serves on the Board of Trustees of several humanitarian organizations. We talk all about impact investment and socially conscious startups and the investment ecosystem that revolves around them.</p><p><strong>SHOW NOTES</strong></p><p><strong>03:14</strong> Introduction to Ilaria Chan</p><p><strong>07:04</strong> Ilaria’s expertise in Impact Investment</p><p><strong>09:32</strong> Understanding the reality of Impact Invest and Difference between East & West</p><p><strong>14:50</strong> Impact vs Profitability: The quandary for social entrepreneurs for raising funds</p><p><strong>20:09</strong> How Tech Unicorns are making social impact a big of their proposition</p><p><strong>26:05</strong> Tangible impact vs Intangible Impact: Is one less important than the other?</p><p><strong>30:22</strong> The “green-washing” trend in impact investment</p><p><strong>34:41</strong> Flow of innovation from East to the West</p><p><strong>43:44</strong> Connect with Ilaria</p><p> </p><p>Many thanks to our guests <strong> Ilaria Chan</strong>; host <strong>Oscar Ramos</strong>; producers <strong>Eva Shi</strong> and  <strong>Sagar Chaudhary</strong>; editor <strong>David</strong>; organizer <strong>Chinaccelerator</strong>; and sponsor<strong> People Squared</strong>. Be sure to check out our website <a href="https://chinaccelerator.com/"><strong>www.chinaccelerator.com</strong></a></p><p>Share, subscribe, review, enjoy!</p><p>To join our listener group on WeChat, please add SOSV Helper (WeChat ID: sosvhero) and ask for the group  invitation.</p><p>To subscribe to our newsletter, please visit  www.asiastartuppulse.com</p><p>Follow us on LinkedIn:  <a href="https://www.linkedin.com/company/asia-startup-pulse/">https://www.linkedin.com/company/asia-startup-pulse</a></p><p>Email us: <a href="mailto:asp-team@asiastartuppulse.com" target="_blank">asp-team@asiastartuppulse.com</a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>Understanding What Impact Investment Truly Is, w/ Ilaria Chan, Advisor on Tech &amp; Social Impact for Grab</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>SOSV, Chinaccelerator</itunes:author>
      <itunes:duration>00:44:59</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>The increased showboating and “greenwashing” of the term “Impact Investment” has virtually led to the term being thrown around loosely: especially, as it is hard to gauge the tangible impact sometimes startups working in this domain bring. But, what exactly is impact investment? How different is the understanding of the term in developed countries compared to emerging markets? How can startups working in this domain find the sweet spot between profitability and impact? Is tangible impact more valuable than intangible ones? Or the other way around? These are some of the many questions that arise while trying to understand the impact of investment space. And in this episode, we bring a prominent guest whose experience across Asia and the US in the impact investment space makes her the perfect guest to answer these questions and more.

In this episode, we are joined by Ilaria Chan, Advisor on Tech &amp; Social Impact for Grab, one of Asia’s most prominent tech unicorns. Having started her career in investment banking with Goldman Sachs, today Ilaria is a global keynote speaker, private investor, and serves on the Board of Trustees of several humanitarian organizations. We talk all about impact investment and socially conscious startups and the investment ecosystem that revolves around them. 
</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>The increased showboating and “greenwashing” of the term “Impact Investment” has virtually led to the term being thrown around loosely: especially, as it is hard to gauge the tangible impact sometimes startups working in this domain bring. But, what exactly is impact investment? How different is the understanding of the term in developed countries compared to emerging markets? How can startups working in this domain find the sweet spot between profitability and impact? Is tangible impact more valuable than intangible ones? Or the other way around? These are some of the many questions that arise while trying to understand the impact of investment space. And in this episode, we bring a prominent guest whose experience across Asia and the US in the impact investment space makes her the perfect guest to answer these questions and more.

In this episode, we are joined by Ilaria Chan, Advisor on Tech &amp; Social Impact for Grab, one of Asia’s most prominent tech unicorns. Having started her career in investment banking with Goldman Sachs, today Ilaria is a global keynote speaker, private investor, and serves on the Board of Trustees of several humanitarian organizations. We talk all about impact investment and socially conscious startups and the investment ecosystem that revolves around them. 
</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>accelerator, unicorn, vc, tech unicorn, entrepreneurship, social impact, social entrepreneurs, us, social entrepreneurship, social, greenwashing, southeast asia, chinaccelerator, investing, impact investing, venture capital, grab, ilaria chan, tech, asia</itunes:keywords>
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      <title>Behind the Company that Catalysed Chinese Startups’ Global Ambitions, with Ronen Mense, APAC President and Managing Director of AppsFlyer</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>In today’s episode, we invite Ronen Mense, President and Managing Director APAC for AppsFlyer, to help us answer these questions and more. In the last 7 years with AppsFlyer, Ronen has managed to grow the mobile analytics platform from newcomer to market leader in APAC achieving 70% market share, triple digital revenue growth year on year, and building an amazing team of 175+ across 7 offices in the region.</p><p> </p><p><strong>Show Notes:</strong></p><p><strong>02:12 </strong>Introduction to Ronen</p><p><strong>03:13 </strong>What is AppsFlyer</p><p><strong>05:03 </strong>China’s strategic value for AppsFlyer and vice-versa</p><p><strong>11:04 </strong>AppsFlyer’s value proposition for Chinese startups expanding overseas</p><p><strong>14:53 </strong>What made AppsFlyer special: The need for independent analytics</p><p><strong>20:59 </strong>Dealing with competitors: How to create moats?</p><p><strong>23:56 </strong>Localizing product to suit the China market</p><p><strong>27:41 </strong>How AppsFlyer stays independent in the Age of Splinternet</p><p><strong>34:05</strong> The Success Playbook for AppsFlyer</p><p><strong>37:08 </strong>Ronen’s Mantra for Success</p><p><strong>42:05</strong> How to contact Ronen</p><p>Many thanks to our guests <strong> Ronen Mense</strong>; host <strong>Oscar Ramos</strong>; producers <strong>Eva Shi</strong> and  <strong>Sagar Chaudhary</strong>; editor <strong>David</strong>; organizer <strong>Chinaccelerator</strong>; and sponsor<strong> People Squared</strong>. Be sure to check out our website <a href="https://chinaccelerator.com/"><strong>www.chinaccelerator.com</strong></a></p><p>Share, subscribe, review, enjoy!</p><p>To join our listener group on WeChat, please add SOSV Helper (WeChat ID: sosvhero) and ask for the group  invitation.</p><p>To subscribe to our newsletter, please visit  www.asiastartuppulse.com</p><p>Follow us on LinkedIn:  <a href="https://www.linkedin.com/company/asia-startup-pulse/">https://www.linkedin.com/company/asia-startup-pulse</a></p><p>Email us: <a href="mailto:team@chinastartuppulse.com"><strong>team@chinastartuppulse.com</strong></a></p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Thu, 27 May 2021 14:07:57 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Chinaccelerator, SOSV)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>In today’s episode, we invite Ronen Mense, President and Managing Director APAC for AppsFlyer, to help us answer these questions and more. In the last 7 years with AppsFlyer, Ronen has managed to grow the mobile analytics platform from newcomer to market leader in APAC achieving 70% market share, triple digital revenue growth year on year, and building an amazing team of 175+ across 7 offices in the region.</p><p> </p><p><strong>Show Notes:</strong></p><p><strong>02:12 </strong>Introduction to Ronen</p><p><strong>03:13 </strong>What is AppsFlyer</p><p><strong>05:03 </strong>China’s strategic value for AppsFlyer and vice-versa</p><p><strong>11:04 </strong>AppsFlyer’s value proposition for Chinese startups expanding overseas</p><p><strong>14:53 </strong>What made AppsFlyer special: The need for independent analytics</p><p><strong>20:59 </strong>Dealing with competitors: How to create moats?</p><p><strong>23:56 </strong>Localizing product to suit the China market</p><p><strong>27:41 </strong>How AppsFlyer stays independent in the Age of Splinternet</p><p><strong>34:05</strong> The Success Playbook for AppsFlyer</p><p><strong>37:08 </strong>Ronen’s Mantra for Success</p><p><strong>42:05</strong> How to contact Ronen</p><p>Many thanks to our guests <strong> Ronen Mense</strong>; host <strong>Oscar Ramos</strong>; producers <strong>Eva Shi</strong> and  <strong>Sagar Chaudhary</strong>; editor <strong>David</strong>; organizer <strong>Chinaccelerator</strong>; and sponsor<strong> People Squared</strong>. Be sure to check out our website <a href="https://chinaccelerator.com/"><strong>www.chinaccelerator.com</strong></a></p><p>Share, subscribe, review, enjoy!</p><p>To join our listener group on WeChat, please add SOSV Helper (WeChat ID: sosvhero) and ask for the group  invitation.</p><p>To subscribe to our newsletter, please visit  www.asiastartuppulse.com</p><p>Follow us on LinkedIn:  <a href="https://www.linkedin.com/company/asia-startup-pulse/">https://www.linkedin.com/company/asia-startup-pulse</a></p><p>Email us: <a href="mailto:team@chinastartuppulse.com"><strong>team@chinastartuppulse.com</strong></a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>Behind the Company that Catalysed Chinese Startups’ Global Ambitions, with Ronen Mense, APAC President and Managing Director of AppsFlyer</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Chinaccelerator, SOSV</itunes:author>
      <itunes:duration>00:43:18</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>Chinese companies going global is not a new phenomenon today. But there was a time when this was relatively unheard of. And today, we talk to the man behind AppsFlyer, the company that essentially fuelled Chinese companies’ ambitions for global expansion by providing them much needed analytics and data in a mobile-frenzy world. Why was AppsFlyer pivotal to Chinese companies? What strategic value did China possess for AppsFlyer? In a market known for intense competition, how did AppsFlyer manage to thrive unscathed and become the market leader? 

In today’s episode, we invite Ronen Mense, President and Managing Director APAC for AppsFlyer, to help us answer these questions and more. In the last 7 years with AppsFlyer, Ronen has managed to grow the mobile analytics platform from newcomer to market leader in APAC achieving 70% market share, triple digital revenue growth year on year, and building an amazing team of 175+ across 7 offices in the region. 
</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>Chinese companies going global is not a new phenomenon today. But there was a time when this was relatively unheard of. And today, we talk to the man behind AppsFlyer, the company that essentially fuelled Chinese companies’ ambitions for global expansion by providing them much needed analytics and data in a mobile-frenzy world. Why was AppsFlyer pivotal to Chinese companies? What strategic value did China possess for AppsFlyer? In a market known for intense competition, how did AppsFlyer manage to thrive unscathed and become the market leader? 

In today’s episode, we invite Ronen Mense, President and Managing Director APAC for AppsFlyer, to help us answer these questions and more. In the last 7 years with AppsFlyer, Ronen has managed to grow the mobile analytics platform from newcomer to market leader in APAC achieving 70% market share, triple digital revenue growth year on year, and building an amazing team of 175+ across 7 offices in the region. 
</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>appsflyer, wechat, alibaba, china startups, china, southeast asia, chinaccelerator, mobile, global expansion, platform, crossborder, apps, analytics, mobile analytics, strategy, startups, mobile platform</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:episode>166</itunes:episode>
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      <title>Examining the Fundamentals of the Marketplace Business Model with James Tan, Managing Partner at Quest Ventures</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>Today, we are going to dig deeper into marketplaces again with James Tan, Managing Partner at Quest Ventures. Prior to this, James was co-founder and COO of 55tuan, a NASDAQ listed e-commerce group that grew to more than 200 cities and 5,000 employees across China.</p><p><strong>Show notes:</strong></p><p>2:10 Introduction to James Tan</p><p>3:48 Transition from startup founder to venture capitalist</p><p>5:35 Introduction to Quest Ventures</p><p>6:50 Most rewarding achievements of running a marketplace</p><p>8:40 What James was excited about marketplace</p><p>11:50 The advantages that a marketplace has to serve customers</p><p>15:08 How to manage or control your marketplace</p><p>17:00 The most innovative marketplace models that James has seen</p><p>19:22 Is a marketplace in Southeast Asia a regional business?</p><p>22:48 The timing for marketplaces to internationalise the business</p><p>25:00 How to localise in Indonesia?</p><p>30:58 The next market that Indonesian companies expand to</p><p>33:40 When should companies reconsider expansion</p><p>34:35 How to innovate the marketplace revenue model?</p><p>39:38 Does “marketplace” have a higher valuation multiple compared to e-commerce?</p><p>Many thanks to our guests <strong> James Tan</strong>; host <strong>Oscar Ramos</strong>; producers <strong>Eva Shi</strong> and  <strong>Sagar Chaudhary</strong>; editor <strong>David</strong>; organizer <strong>Chinaccelerator</strong>; and sponsor<strong> People Squared</strong>. Be sure to check out our website <a href="https://chinaccelerator.com/"><strong>www.chinaccelerator.com</strong></a></p><p>Share, subscribe, review, enjoy!</p><p>To join our listener group on WeChat, please add SOSV Helper (WeChat ID: sosvhero) and ask for the group  invitation.</p><p>To subscribe to our newsletter, please visit  www.asiastartuppulse.com</p><p>Follow us on LinkedIn:  <a href="https://www.linkedin.com/company/asia-startup-pulse/">https://www.linkedin.com/company/asia-startup-pulse</a></p><p>Email us: <a href="mailto:team@chinastartuppulse.com"><strong>team@chinastartuppulse.com</strong></a></p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Thu, 20 May 2021 13:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Chinaccelerator, SOSV)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Today, we are going to dig deeper into marketplaces again with James Tan, Managing Partner at Quest Ventures. Prior to this, James was co-founder and COO of 55tuan, a NASDAQ listed e-commerce group that grew to more than 200 cities and 5,000 employees across China.</p><p><strong>Show notes:</strong></p><p>2:10 Introduction to James Tan</p><p>3:48 Transition from startup founder to venture capitalist</p><p>5:35 Introduction to Quest Ventures</p><p>6:50 Most rewarding achievements of running a marketplace</p><p>8:40 What James was excited about marketplace</p><p>11:50 The advantages that a marketplace has to serve customers</p><p>15:08 How to manage or control your marketplace</p><p>17:00 The most innovative marketplace models that James has seen</p><p>19:22 Is a marketplace in Southeast Asia a regional business?</p><p>22:48 The timing for marketplaces to internationalise the business</p><p>25:00 How to localise in Indonesia?</p><p>30:58 The next market that Indonesian companies expand to</p><p>33:40 When should companies reconsider expansion</p><p>34:35 How to innovate the marketplace revenue model?</p><p>39:38 Does “marketplace” have a higher valuation multiple compared to e-commerce?</p><p>Many thanks to our guests <strong> James Tan</strong>; host <strong>Oscar Ramos</strong>; producers <strong>Eva Shi</strong> and  <strong>Sagar Chaudhary</strong>; editor <strong>David</strong>; organizer <strong>Chinaccelerator</strong>; and sponsor<strong> People Squared</strong>. Be sure to check out our website <a href="https://chinaccelerator.com/"><strong>www.chinaccelerator.com</strong></a></p><p>Share, subscribe, review, enjoy!</p><p>To join our listener group on WeChat, please add SOSV Helper (WeChat ID: sosvhero) and ask for the group  invitation.</p><p>To subscribe to our newsletter, please visit  www.asiastartuppulse.com</p><p>Follow us on LinkedIn:  <a href="https://www.linkedin.com/company/asia-startup-pulse/">https://www.linkedin.com/company/asia-startup-pulse</a></p><p>Email us: <a href="mailto:team@chinastartuppulse.com"><strong>team@chinastartuppulse.com</strong></a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>Examining the Fundamentals of the Marketplace Business Model with James Tan, Managing Partner at Quest Ventures</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Chinaccelerator, SOSV</itunes:author>
      <itunes:duration>00:41:48</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>Marketplace is one of the most common business models in Southeast Asia nowadays. In one of our previous episodes, we talked to Aaron Tan, founder of Carro, about how he has built one of the biggest used-car marketplaces in Southeast Asia. 

Today, we are going to dig deeper into marketplaces again with James Tan, Managing Partner at Quest Ventures. Prior to this, James was co-founder and COO of 55tuan, a NASDAQ listed e-commerce group that grew to more than 200 cities and 5,000 employees across China.

In this episode, we talk about all the business fundamentals of building a marketplace: from the advantages and challenges of building a marketplace to how to manage or control it, to the importance of timing in expanding to multiple markets. A someone who has built a successful e-commerce marketplace himself and invested in several more, James also shares the most innovative marketplace models in the market and how he believes the business model can be innovated. </itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>Marketplace is one of the most common business models in Southeast Asia nowadays. In one of our previous episodes, we talked to Aaron Tan, founder of Carro, about how he has built one of the biggest used-car marketplaces in Southeast Asia. 

Today, we are going to dig deeper into marketplaces again with James Tan, Managing Partner at Quest Ventures. Prior to this, James was co-founder and COO of 55tuan, a NASDAQ listed e-commerce group that grew to more than 200 cities and 5,000 employees across China.

In this episode, we talk about all the business fundamentals of building a marketplace: from the advantages and challenges of building a marketplace to how to manage or control it, to the importance of timing in expanding to multiple markets. A someone who has built a successful e-commerce marketplace himself and invested in several more, James also shares the most innovative marketplace models in the market and how he believes the business model can be innovated. </itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>accelerator, business model, investor, venture capitalist, entrepreneurship, indonesia, founder, internationalization, southeast asia, chinaccelerator, startup, venture capital, entrepreneur, innovation, quest ventures, marketplace, expansion, ecommerce</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:episode>165</itunes:episode>
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      <title>Understanding the Hype around NFTs with Mia Deng, Partner at Dragonfly Capital</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>For this special episode, we invite Mia Deng, Partner at Dragonfly Capital and Co-founder of NFT marketplace TR Lab, to dive deeper into the NFT space and also talk more about Dragonfly Capital’s latest $225 million fund, primarily focused on DeFi and NFTs. We also cover topics around the evolution of the crypto industry and the synergies between traditional VCs and crypto VCs.</p><p> </p><p><strong>Show Notes:</strong></p><p>1:29 Introduction to Mia Deng</p><p>4:12 How the narrative around the crypto industry has evolved</p><p>6:48 Introduction to Dragonfly Capital and their unique proposition</p><p>9:19 How traditional VCs are working with crypto VCs</p><p>11:10 Crypto is Global from Day 1!</p><p>13:21 How crypto VCs work with founders</p><p>16:17 Understanding the intricacies of Sequoia China as an LP in Dragonfly Capital</p><p>21:14 Building in the bear market</p><p>24:14 What is NFT?</p><p>25:34 Why are NFTs booming now?</p><p>28:39 What industries will adapt NFTs?</p><p>32:38 The inefficiency in the NFT infrastructure space</p><p>35:12 Is NFT the next ICO?</p><p>36:35 NFT in China</p><p>38:09 How to reach out to Mia</p><p> </p><p>Many thanks to our guests <strong> Mia Deng</strong>; host <strong>Oscar Ramos</strong>; producers <strong>Eva Shi</strong> and  <strong>Sagar Chaudhary</strong>; editor <strong>David</strong>; organizer <strong>Chinaccelerator</strong>; and sponsor<strong> People Squared</strong>. Be sure to check out our website <a href="https://chinaccelerator.com/"><strong>www.chinaccelerator.com</strong></a></p><p>Share, subscribe, review, enjoy!</p><p>To join our listener group on WeChat, please add SOSV Helper (WeChat ID: sosvhero) and ask for the group  invitation.</p><p>To subscribe to our newsletter, please visit  www.asiastartuppulse.com</p><p>Follow us on LinkedIn:  <a href="https://www.linkedin.com/company/asia-startup-pulse/">https://www.linkedin.com/company/asia-startup-pulse</a></p><p>Email us: <a href="mailto:team@chinastartuppulse.com"><strong>team@chinastartuppulse.com</strong></a></p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Thu, 13 May 2021 13:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (SOSV, Chinaccelerator)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>For this special episode, we invite Mia Deng, Partner at Dragonfly Capital and Co-founder of NFT marketplace TR Lab, to dive deeper into the NFT space and also talk more about Dragonfly Capital’s latest $225 million fund, primarily focused on DeFi and NFTs. We also cover topics around the evolution of the crypto industry and the synergies between traditional VCs and crypto VCs.</p><p> </p><p><strong>Show Notes:</strong></p><p>1:29 Introduction to Mia Deng</p><p>4:12 How the narrative around the crypto industry has evolved</p><p>6:48 Introduction to Dragonfly Capital and their unique proposition</p><p>9:19 How traditional VCs are working with crypto VCs</p><p>11:10 Crypto is Global from Day 1!</p><p>13:21 How crypto VCs work with founders</p><p>16:17 Understanding the intricacies of Sequoia China as an LP in Dragonfly Capital</p><p>21:14 Building in the bear market</p><p>24:14 What is NFT?</p><p>25:34 Why are NFTs booming now?</p><p>28:39 What industries will adapt NFTs?</p><p>32:38 The inefficiency in the NFT infrastructure space</p><p>35:12 Is NFT the next ICO?</p><p>36:35 NFT in China</p><p>38:09 How to reach out to Mia</p><p> </p><p>Many thanks to our guests <strong> Mia Deng</strong>; host <strong>Oscar Ramos</strong>; producers <strong>Eva Shi</strong> and  <strong>Sagar Chaudhary</strong>; editor <strong>David</strong>; organizer <strong>Chinaccelerator</strong>; and sponsor<strong> People Squared</strong>. Be sure to check out our website <a href="https://chinaccelerator.com/"><strong>www.chinaccelerator.com</strong></a></p><p>Share, subscribe, review, enjoy!</p><p>To join our listener group on WeChat, please add SOSV Helper (WeChat ID: sosvhero) and ask for the group  invitation.</p><p>To subscribe to our newsletter, please visit  www.asiastartuppulse.com</p><p>Follow us on LinkedIn:  <a href="https://www.linkedin.com/company/asia-startup-pulse/">https://www.linkedin.com/company/asia-startup-pulse</a></p><p>Email us: <a href="mailto:team@chinastartuppulse.com"><strong>team@chinastartuppulse.com</strong></a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>Understanding the Hype around NFTs with Mia Deng, Partner at Dragonfly Capital</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>SOSV, Chinaccelerator</itunes:author>
      <itunes:duration>00:39:46</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>NFTs in 2021 has become what ICOs were in 2017: the biggest buzzword in the cryptocurrency and blockchain space. Even though NFTs as a concept is not something entirely new, it is only now that they have become more hyped. But what exactly are NFTs? Why are they gaining so much popularity today? Which industries stand to gain the most with the rise of these non-fungible tokens? How will this industry evolve? And most importantly, is this another bubble ready to burst?

For this special episode, we invite Mia Deng, Partner at Dragonfly Capital and Co-founder of NFT marketplace TR Lab, to dive deeper into the NFT space and also talk more about Dragonfly Capital’s latest $225 million fund, primarily focused on DeFi and NFTs. We also cover topics around the evolution of the crypto industry and the synergies between traditional VCs and crypto VCs.</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>NFTs in 2021 has become what ICOs were in 2017: the biggest buzzword in the cryptocurrency and blockchain space. Even though NFTs as a concept is not something entirely new, it is only now that they have become more hyped. But what exactly are NFTs? Why are they gaining so much popularity today? Which industries stand to gain the most with the rise of these non-fungible tokens? How will this industry evolve? And most importantly, is this another bubble ready to burst?

For this special episode, we invite Mia Deng, Partner at Dragonfly Capital and Co-founder of NFT marketplace TR Lab, to dive deeper into the NFT space and also talk more about Dragonfly Capital’s latest $225 million fund, primarily focused on DeFi and NFTs. We also cover topics around the evolution of the crypto industry and the synergies between traditional VCs and crypto VCs.</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>accelerator, cryptocurrency, cryptokitties, nft, crypto, vc, tokenization, china, founders, nonfungibletoken, nft marketplace, chinaccelerator, dragonfly capital, defi, startup, trlab, ico, token, blockchain, venturecapital, infrastructure, marketplace, crypto art, nfts</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:episode>164</itunes:episode>
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      <title>Investigating China&apos;s Anti-Monopoly Enforcements on Tech Giants, with Rui Ma, founder of Tech Buzz China</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>Today, we invite our guest Rui Ma, founder of Tech Buzz China and former Investment Partner at 500 Startups, to discuss these questions in detail on our show. Rui has fifteen years of experience in technology and finance, spanning seed stage to pre-IPO investing spread evenly between the U.S. and China.</p><p><strong>Show Notes:</strong></p><p>1:51 Introduction to Rui Ma</p><p>2:01 The anti-monopoly policy in China</p><p>3:28 The reason why Chinese Internet ecosystems don’t collaborate</p><p>5:03 Does the regulation help with the competition</p><p>8:35 The case of Qihu360 and Tencent</p><p>11:10 What triggered the recent regulation</p><p>13:29 Public reaction towards the regulation</p><p>18:30 The regulation’s impact on entrepreneurs</p><p>20:17 Will the fine drive new changes in tech giants</p><p>24:50 How China is catching up with other markets</p><p>28:45 Will the regulation be detrimental to innovation</p><p>33:35 How to contact Rui Ma</p><p><br />Many thanks to our guests <strong>Rui Ma</strong>; host <strong>Oscar Ramos</strong>; producers <strong>Eva Shi</strong> and  <strong>Sagar Chaudhary</strong>; editor <strong>David</strong>; organizer <strong>Chinaccelerator</strong>; and sponsor<strong> People Squared</strong>. Be sure to check out our website <a href="https://chinaccelerator.com/"><strong>www.chinaccelerator.com</strong></a></p><p>Share, subscribe, review, enjoy!</p><p>To join our listener group on WeChat, please add SOSV Helper (WeChat ID: sosvhero) and ask for the group  invitation.</p><p>To subscribe to our newsletter, please visit  www.asiastartuppulse.com</p><p>Follow us on LinkedIn:  <a href="https://www.linkedin.com/company/asia-startup-pulse/">https://www.linkedin.com/company/asia-startup-pulse</a></p><p>Email us: <a href="mailto:team@chinastartuppulse.com"><strong>team@chinastartuppulse.com</strong></a></p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Thu, 6 May 2021 13:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Chinaccelerator, SOSV)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Today, we invite our guest Rui Ma, founder of Tech Buzz China and former Investment Partner at 500 Startups, to discuss these questions in detail on our show. Rui has fifteen years of experience in technology and finance, spanning seed stage to pre-IPO investing spread evenly between the U.S. and China.</p><p><strong>Show Notes:</strong></p><p>1:51 Introduction to Rui Ma</p><p>2:01 The anti-monopoly policy in China</p><p>3:28 The reason why Chinese Internet ecosystems don’t collaborate</p><p>5:03 Does the regulation help with the competition</p><p>8:35 The case of Qihu360 and Tencent</p><p>11:10 What triggered the recent regulation</p><p>13:29 Public reaction towards the regulation</p><p>18:30 The regulation’s impact on entrepreneurs</p><p>20:17 Will the fine drive new changes in tech giants</p><p>24:50 How China is catching up with other markets</p><p>28:45 Will the regulation be detrimental to innovation</p><p>33:35 How to contact Rui Ma</p><p><br />Many thanks to our guests <strong>Rui Ma</strong>; host <strong>Oscar Ramos</strong>; producers <strong>Eva Shi</strong> and  <strong>Sagar Chaudhary</strong>; editor <strong>David</strong>; organizer <strong>Chinaccelerator</strong>; and sponsor<strong> People Squared</strong>. Be sure to check out our website <a href="https://chinaccelerator.com/"><strong>www.chinaccelerator.com</strong></a></p><p>Share, subscribe, review, enjoy!</p><p>To join our listener group on WeChat, please add SOSV Helper (WeChat ID: sosvhero) and ask for the group  invitation.</p><p>To subscribe to our newsletter, please visit  www.asiastartuppulse.com</p><p>Follow us on LinkedIn:  <a href="https://www.linkedin.com/company/asia-startup-pulse/">https://www.linkedin.com/company/asia-startup-pulse</a></p><p>Email us: <a href="mailto:team@chinastartuppulse.com"><strong>team@chinastartuppulse.com</strong></a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>Investigating China&apos;s Anti-Monopoly Enforcements on Tech Giants, with Rui Ma, founder of Tech Buzz China</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Chinaccelerator, SOSV</itunes:author>
      <itunes:duration>00:34:20</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>Recently, Chinese regulators hit Alibaba with a $2.8 billion fine in its anti-monopoly investigation, which amounts to about 4% of the company’s 2019 domestic revenue. China’s leading internet companies, such as Baidu, ByteDance, and JD.com also issued commitments to obey antitrust laws and conduct self-inspections. 

Even though the “Anti Monopoly Law of China” came into effect in 2008, we did not see a glimpse of any major action being taken by regulators until very recently when they slapped Alibaba with the huge fine.

What’s the trigger for these regulations? What are the reactions from the public and what impact has it created in the ecosystem? Will the regulation be detrimental to innovation or helpful in fostering competition?

Today, we invite our guest Rui Ma, founder of Tech Buzz China and former Investment Partner at 500 Startups, to discuss these questions in detail on our show. Rui has fifteen years of experience in technology and finance, spanning seed stage to pre-IPO investing spread evenly between the U.S. and China.
</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>Recently, Chinese regulators hit Alibaba with a $2.8 billion fine in its anti-monopoly investigation, which amounts to about 4% of the company’s 2019 domestic revenue. China’s leading internet companies, such as Baidu, ByteDance, and JD.com also issued commitments to obey antitrust laws and conduct self-inspections. 

Even though the “Anti Monopoly Law of China” came into effect in 2008, we did not see a glimpse of any major action being taken by regulators until very recently when they slapped Alibaba with the huge fine.

What’s the trigger for these regulations? What are the reactions from the public and what impact has it created in the ecosystem? Will the regulation be detrimental to innovation or helpful in fostering competition?

Today, we invite our guest Rui Ma, founder of Tech Buzz China and former Investment Partner at 500 Startups, to discuss these questions in detail on our show. Rui has fifteen years of experience in technology and finance, spanning seed stage to pre-IPO investing spread evenly between the U.S. and China.
</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>accelerator, alibaba, vc, china, monopoly, chinaccelerator, tech gaints, sosv, venture capital, antitrust, innovation, regulation, startups, competition, entrepreneurs, tencent, tech, law, internet, t, anti monopoly</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:episode>163</itunes:episode>
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      <title>Founder Brain Food: Building Trust with Customers, and Non-market Strategic Thinking; w/ Victoria Hoang and Jack Ren</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>Victoria Hoang is the Data Partner at Bristol Myers Squibb, where she counsels teams on data privacy and cybersecurity law. In her 20+ years of experience in life sciences and management consulting, she has served on several innovation programs working closely with startups. In today’s talk, she covers one of the most important pre-requisite for startups, which is building trust.</p><p>Jack Ren is the Managing Director of Eminence Ventures where he is responsible for the firm’s cloud and IT infrastructure investments. Over the course of his career, he has spearheaded China Mobile’s One NET IoT platform and worked for some of the biggest tech corporations including Samsung and Sony. In today’s talk, Jack shares insights around non-market strategic thinking and how firms should factor it in their decision-making.</p><p><strong>Show Notes:</strong></p><p><strong>[01:43] Victoria Hoang: How to Build Trust with Customers</strong></p><p><strong>[13:41 ] Jack Ren: Non-market Strategical Thinking</strong></p><p> </p><p>Many thanks to our guests Victoria Hoang and Jack Ren; host <strong>Oscar Ramos</strong>; producers <strong>Eva Shi</strong> and  <strong>Sagar Chaudhary</strong>; editor <strong>David</strong>; organizer <strong>Chinaccelerator</strong>; and sponsor<strong> People Squared</strong>. Be sure to check out our website <a href="https://chinaccelerator.com/"><strong>www.chinaccelerator.com</strong></a></p><p>Share, subscribe, review, enjoy!</p><p>To join our listener group on WeChat, please add SOSV Helper (WeChat ID: sosvhero) and ask for the group  invitation.</p><p>Follow us on LinkedIn:  <a href="https://www.linkedin.com/company/asia-startup-pulse/">https://www.linkedin.com/company/asia-startup-pulse</a></p><p>Email us: <a href="mailto:team@chinastartuppulse.com"><strong>team@chinastartuppulse.com</strong></a></p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Thu, 29 Apr 2021 15:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Oscar Ramos, Chinaccelerator, SOSV)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Victoria Hoang is the Data Partner at Bristol Myers Squibb, where she counsels teams on data privacy and cybersecurity law. In her 20+ years of experience in life sciences and management consulting, she has served on several innovation programs working closely with startups. In today’s talk, she covers one of the most important pre-requisite for startups, which is building trust.</p><p>Jack Ren is the Managing Director of Eminence Ventures where he is responsible for the firm’s cloud and IT infrastructure investments. Over the course of his career, he has spearheaded China Mobile’s One NET IoT platform and worked for some of the biggest tech corporations including Samsung and Sony. In today’s talk, Jack shares insights around non-market strategic thinking and how firms should factor it in their decision-making.</p><p><strong>Show Notes:</strong></p><p><strong>[01:43] Victoria Hoang: How to Build Trust with Customers</strong></p><p><strong>[13:41 ] Jack Ren: Non-market Strategical Thinking</strong></p><p> </p><p>Many thanks to our guests Victoria Hoang and Jack Ren; host <strong>Oscar Ramos</strong>; producers <strong>Eva Shi</strong> and  <strong>Sagar Chaudhary</strong>; editor <strong>David</strong>; organizer <strong>Chinaccelerator</strong>; and sponsor<strong> People Squared</strong>. Be sure to check out our website <a href="https://chinaccelerator.com/"><strong>www.chinaccelerator.com</strong></a></p><p>Share, subscribe, review, enjoy!</p><p>To join our listener group on WeChat, please add SOSV Helper (WeChat ID: sosvhero) and ask for the group  invitation.</p><p>Follow us on LinkedIn:  <a href="https://www.linkedin.com/company/asia-startup-pulse/">https://www.linkedin.com/company/asia-startup-pulse</a></p><p>Email us: <a href="mailto:team@chinastartuppulse.com"><strong>team@chinastartuppulse.com</strong></a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>Founder Brain Food: Building Trust with Customers, and Non-market Strategic Thinking; w/ Victoria Hoang and Jack Ren</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Oscar Ramos, Chinaccelerator, SOSV</itunes:author>
      <itunes:duration>00:21:44</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>Welcome to another episode of the Asia Startup Pulse! This week, we will continue with our 8x8 Global Speaker Series and bringing talks from two exceptional speakers from diverse backgrounds to share some interesting brain food for founders. First up, we have Victoria Hoang, Data Partner at Bristol Myers Squibb, where she counsels teams on data privacy and cybersecurity law. In her 20+ years of experience in life sciences and management consulting, she has served on several innovation programs working closely with startups. In today’s talk, she covers one of the most important pre-requisite for startups, which is building trust.

Our second speaker for today is Jack Ren, Managing Director of Eminence Ventures where he is responsible for the firm’s cloud and IT infrastructure investments. Over the course of his career, he has spearheaded China Mobile’s One NET IoT platform and worked for some of the biggest tech corporations including Samsung and Sony. In today’s talk, Jack shares insights around non-market strategic thinking and how firms should factor it in their decision-making.</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>Welcome to another episode of the Asia Startup Pulse! This week, we will continue with our 8x8 Global Speaker Series and bringing talks from two exceptional speakers from diverse backgrounds to share some interesting brain food for founders. First up, we have Victoria Hoang, Data Partner at Bristol Myers Squibb, where she counsels teams on data privacy and cybersecurity law. In her 20+ years of experience in life sciences and management consulting, she has served on several innovation programs working closely with startups. In today’s talk, she covers one of the most important pre-requisite for startups, which is building trust.

Our second speaker for today is Jack Ren, Managing Director of Eminence Ventures where he is responsible for the firm’s cloud and IT infrastructure investments. Over the course of his career, he has spearheaded China Mobile’s One NET IoT platform and worked for some of the biggest tech corporations including Samsung and Sony. In today’s talk, Jack shares insights around non-market strategic thinking and how firms should factor it in their decision-making.</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>strategic thinking, iot, cybersecurity, data, vc, china, southeast asia, eminence ventures, jack ren, startup, venture capital, innovation, strategy, victoria hoang, bristol myers squibb, asia, data security</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
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      <itunes:episode>162</itunes:episode>
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      <title>Setting your Startup for Success: VCs Perspective on Chinese startups expanding across borders, Becoming Investible, and Leveraging Investors; w/ Rui Ma, Kal Patel and Nichapat Ark</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>Rui Ma is a former VC-turned independent tech analyst with her experience spanning from seed stage to pre-IPO investing spread between the US and China. She is well versed with the startup ecosystems in the US and China, having previously worked at 500 Startups as an investment partner. In today’s talk, she offers some invaluable insights for startups going across borders and brings light to potential pitfalls that startups must avoid at all costs.</p><p>Kal Patel is a seasoned investor and the Resident Advisor at Oxford  Foundry and has led the expansion of Best Buy in Asia in the past. He brings with him a plethora of experience working with and investing in startups from all around the world. Even startups that have the most groundbreaking technology oftentimes fail to generate interest from investors early on and in his talk, he shares insights as to how early-stage startups can become more investible.</p><p>Nichapat Ark works extensively with Openspace Venture’s Thailand-based startups as well as startups looking to expand into Thailand. In her talk, she shares insights as to how startups can better leverage their investors, an art that every startup founder must perfect.</p><p><strong>Show notes:</strong></p><p>02:20 - Rui Ma: Important considerations for Chinese startups going global</p><p>13:40 - Kal Patel: How can startups become more "Investible"</p><p>24:00 - Nichapat Ark: How to better leverage your investor</p><p> </p><p>Many thanks to our guests Rui Ma, Kal Patel, and Nichapat Ark; host <strong>Oscar Ramos</strong>; producers <strong>Eva Shi</strong> and  <strong>Sagar Chaudhary</strong>; editor <strong>David</strong>; organizer <strong>Chinaccelerator</strong>; and sponsor<strong> People Squared</strong>. Be sure to check out our website <a href="https://chinaccelerator.com/"><strong>www.chinaccelerator.com</strong></a></p><p>Share, subscribe, review, enjoy!</p><p>To join our listener group on WeChat, please add SOSV Helper (WeChat ID: sosvhero) and ask for the group  invitation.</p><p>Follow us on LinkedIn:  <a href="https://www.linkedin.com/company/asia-startup-pulse/">https://www.linkedin.com/company/asia-startup-pulse</a></p><p>Email us: <a href="mailto:team@chinastartuppulse.com"><strong>team@chinastartuppulse.com</strong></a></p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Thu, 22 Apr 2021 12:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Oscar Ramos, Chinaccelerator)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Rui Ma is a former VC-turned independent tech analyst with her experience spanning from seed stage to pre-IPO investing spread between the US and China. She is well versed with the startup ecosystems in the US and China, having previously worked at 500 Startups as an investment partner. In today’s talk, she offers some invaluable insights for startups going across borders and brings light to potential pitfalls that startups must avoid at all costs.</p><p>Kal Patel is a seasoned investor and the Resident Advisor at Oxford  Foundry and has led the expansion of Best Buy in Asia in the past. He brings with him a plethora of experience working with and investing in startups from all around the world. Even startups that have the most groundbreaking technology oftentimes fail to generate interest from investors early on and in his talk, he shares insights as to how early-stage startups can become more investible.</p><p>Nichapat Ark works extensively with Openspace Venture’s Thailand-based startups as well as startups looking to expand into Thailand. In her talk, she shares insights as to how startups can better leverage their investors, an art that every startup founder must perfect.</p><p><strong>Show notes:</strong></p><p>02:20 - Rui Ma: Important considerations for Chinese startups going global</p><p>13:40 - Kal Patel: How can startups become more "Investible"</p><p>24:00 - Nichapat Ark: How to better leverage your investor</p><p> </p><p>Many thanks to our guests Rui Ma, Kal Patel, and Nichapat Ark; host <strong>Oscar Ramos</strong>; producers <strong>Eva Shi</strong> and  <strong>Sagar Chaudhary</strong>; editor <strong>David</strong>; organizer <strong>Chinaccelerator</strong>; and sponsor<strong> People Squared</strong>. Be sure to check out our website <a href="https://chinaccelerator.com/"><strong>www.chinaccelerator.com</strong></a></p><p>Share, subscribe, review, enjoy!</p><p>To join our listener group on WeChat, please add SOSV Helper (WeChat ID: sosvhero) and ask for the group  invitation.</p><p>Follow us on LinkedIn:  <a href="https://www.linkedin.com/company/asia-startup-pulse/">https://www.linkedin.com/company/asia-startup-pulse</a></p><p>Email us: <a href="mailto:team@chinastartuppulse.com"><strong>team@chinastartuppulse.com</strong></a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>Setting your Startup for Success: VCs Perspective on Chinese startups expanding across borders, Becoming Investible, and Leveraging Investors; w/ Rui Ma, Kal Patel and Nichapat Ark</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Oscar Ramos, Chinaccelerator</itunes:author>
      <itunes:duration>00:30:48</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>Welcome to another episode of the Asia Startup Pulse! Today, we have a special episode from our 8x8 Global Speaker Series where we bring 8 notable speakers to talk about their experiences in building, operating, and scaling businesses across Asia and beyond. In today’s episode, we are bringing three incredible speakers and seasoned investors: Rui Ma, Kal Patel, and Nichapat Ark, to share their insights on what it takes to succeed as an entrepreneur building cross-border businesses. </itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>Welcome to another episode of the Asia Startup Pulse! Today, we have a special episode from our 8x8 Global Speaker Series where we bring 8 notable speakers to talk about their experiences in building, operating, and scaling businesses across Asia and beyond. In today’s episode, we are bringing three incredible speakers and seasoned investors: Rui Ma, Kal Patel, and Nichapat Ark, to share their insights on what it takes to succeed as an entrepreneur building cross-border businesses. </itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>vc, china, founders, venture, founder, chinaccelerator, investing, cross-border, startup, venture capital, rui ma, startups, overseas, thailand, nichapat ark, investment, kal patel, expansion</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:episode>161</itunes:episode>
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      <title>Inside the Mobile Esports Business in Southeast Asia, with Allan Phang, Regional Head of Marketing PR at EVOS Esports</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>In today’s episode, we dig deeper into esports as a business in SEA with Allan Phang, the Regional Head of Marketing PR at EVOS Esports and former Head of Esports at AirAsia.</p><p>Show Notes:</p><p>02:50 Allan Phang’s experience in esports</p><p>09:00 Introduction to EVOS Esports</p><p>12:21 Debunking common myths about professional esports</p><p>14:08 Career lifespan of professional esports players</p><p>17:55 The role of game publishers in the industry</p><p>20:40 Ramifications of breaching gaming etiquette and rules</p><p>22:15 Other players and opportunities in the esports ecosystem</p><p>25:37 The relationship between global game publishers and local tournament event organisers</p><p>28:29 Southeast Asia’s unique position in the esports industry</p><p>33:10 Brands’ attitudes towards esports events</p><p>36:40 Different revenue models in esports</p><p>38:32 The next big thing in esports in SEA</p><p>39:50 How to contact Allan</p><p>Many thanks to our guests Allan Phang; host <strong>Oscar Ramos</strong>; producers <strong>Eva Shi</strong> and  <strong>Sagar Chaudhary</strong>; editor <strong>David</strong>; organizer <strong>Chinaccelerator</strong>; and sponsor<strong> People Squared</strong>. Be sure to check out our website <a href="https://chinaccelerator.com/"><strong>www.chinaccelerator.com</strong></a></p><p>Share, subscribe, review, enjoy!</p><p>To join our listener group on WeChat, please add SOSV Helper (WeChat ID: sosvhero) and ask for the group  invitation.</p><p>Follow us on LinkedIn:  <a href="https://www.linkedin.com/company/asia-startup-pulse/">https://www.linkedin.com/company/asia-startup-pulse</a></p><p>Email us: <a href="mailto:team@chinastartuppulse.com"><strong>team@chinastartuppulse.com</strong></a></p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Fri, 16 Apr 2021 02:18:15 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Chinaccelerator, sosv)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>In today’s episode, we dig deeper into esports as a business in SEA with Allan Phang, the Regional Head of Marketing PR at EVOS Esports and former Head of Esports at AirAsia.</p><p>Show Notes:</p><p>02:50 Allan Phang’s experience in esports</p><p>09:00 Introduction to EVOS Esports</p><p>12:21 Debunking common myths about professional esports</p><p>14:08 Career lifespan of professional esports players</p><p>17:55 The role of game publishers in the industry</p><p>20:40 Ramifications of breaching gaming etiquette and rules</p><p>22:15 Other players and opportunities in the esports ecosystem</p><p>25:37 The relationship between global game publishers and local tournament event organisers</p><p>28:29 Southeast Asia’s unique position in the esports industry</p><p>33:10 Brands’ attitudes towards esports events</p><p>36:40 Different revenue models in esports</p><p>38:32 The next big thing in esports in SEA</p><p>39:50 How to contact Allan</p><p>Many thanks to our guests Allan Phang; host <strong>Oscar Ramos</strong>; producers <strong>Eva Shi</strong> and  <strong>Sagar Chaudhary</strong>; editor <strong>David</strong>; organizer <strong>Chinaccelerator</strong>; and sponsor<strong> People Squared</strong>. Be sure to check out our website <a href="https://chinaccelerator.com/"><strong>www.chinaccelerator.com</strong></a></p><p>Share, subscribe, review, enjoy!</p><p>To join our listener group on WeChat, please add SOSV Helper (WeChat ID: sosvhero) and ask for the group  invitation.</p><p>Follow us on LinkedIn:  <a href="https://www.linkedin.com/company/asia-startup-pulse/">https://www.linkedin.com/company/asia-startup-pulse</a></p><p>Email us: <a href="mailto:team@chinastartuppulse.com"><strong>team@chinastartuppulse.com</strong></a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>Inside the Mobile Esports Business in Southeast Asia, with Allan Phang, Regional Head of Marketing PR at EVOS Esports</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Chinaccelerator, sosv</itunes:author>
      <itunes:duration>00:41:26</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>Esports as a whole has seen tremendous growth in Southeast Asia, especially driven by the growth of the mobile-first economy.  In today’s episode, we dig deeper into the esports business in SEA with Allan Phang, the Regional Head of Marketing PR at EVOS Esports and former Head of Esports at AirAsia. 

We discuss the differences between esports and traditional sports while debunking the common myths about professional esports. Furthermore, Allan talks about his opinion about the roles of different stakeholders in the whole esports ecosystem, the unique proposition of Southeast Asia market in the esports sector, and also the next big thing we can expect in the industry.
</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>Esports as a whole has seen tremendous growth in Southeast Asia, especially driven by the growth of the mobile-first economy.  In today’s episode, we dig deeper into the esports business in SEA with Allan Phang, the Regional Head of Marketing PR at EVOS Esports and former Head of Esports at AirAsia. 

We discuss the differences between esports and traditional sports while debunking the common myths about professional esports. Furthermore, Allan talks about his opinion about the roles of different stakeholders in the whole esports ecosystem, the unique proposition of Southeast Asia market in the esports sector, and also the next big thing we can expect in the industry.
</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>accelerator, early stage startups, esports, southeast asia, game pulishers, video games, investments, venture capital, mobile-only, airaisa, startups, mobile-first, evos esports, sea</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
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      <itunes:episode>160</itunes:episode>
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      <title>Building the Biggest Used-car Marketplace in SEA, with Aaron Tan, founder of Carro</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>This is a special episode which we recorded live on Clubhouse with our guest Aaron Tan, Founder of Carro, one of the biggest used-car marketplaces in Southeast Asia.</p><p>Show Notes:</p><p>0:00 -  Introduction to Aaron Tan</p><p>1:32 - Aaron’s motivation to founding a startup</p><p>6:01 - The supportive ecosystem around Carro</p><p>8:19 - The importance of “Trust” in a business</p><p>8:50 - The reasons behind starting an automotive marketplace in SEA</p><p>13:35 - Inspiration from Chinese business models</p><p>19:21 - Understanding the heterogeneity in the markets</p><p>21:15 - Aaron’s experience on how copying the same model across SEA doesn’t work</p><p>25:39 - How to build and scale a two-side marketplace</p><p>30:37 - The role of Carro in the marketplace</p><p>35:17 - Carro’s expansion playbook across SEA</p><p>44:20 - What the future holds for Carro and Southeast Asia</p><p>Many thanks to our guests <strong>Aaron Tan</strong>; host <strong>Oscar Ramos</strong>; producers <strong>Eva Shi</strong> and  <strong>Sagar Chaudhary</strong>; editor <strong>David</strong>; organizer <strong>Chinaccelerator</strong>; and sponsor<strong> People Squared</strong>. Be sure to check out our website <a href="https://chinaccelerator.com/"><strong>www.chinaccelerator.com</strong></a></p><p>Share, subscribe, review, enjoy!</p><p>To join our listener group on WeChat, please add SOSV Helper (WeChat ID: sosvhero) and ask for the group  invitation.</p><p>Follow us on LinkedIn:  <a href="https://www.linkedin.com/company/asia-startup-pulse/">https://www.linkedin.com/company/asia-startup-pulse</a></p><p>Email us: <a href="mailto:team@chinastartuppulse.com"><strong>team@chinastartuppulse.com</strong></a></p><p> </p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Thu, 8 Apr 2021 14:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Chinaccelerator, SOSV)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>This is a special episode which we recorded live on Clubhouse with our guest Aaron Tan, Founder of Carro, one of the biggest used-car marketplaces in Southeast Asia.</p><p>Show Notes:</p><p>0:00 -  Introduction to Aaron Tan</p><p>1:32 - Aaron’s motivation to founding a startup</p><p>6:01 - The supportive ecosystem around Carro</p><p>8:19 - The importance of “Trust” in a business</p><p>8:50 - The reasons behind starting an automotive marketplace in SEA</p><p>13:35 - Inspiration from Chinese business models</p><p>19:21 - Understanding the heterogeneity in the markets</p><p>21:15 - Aaron’s experience on how copying the same model across SEA doesn’t work</p><p>25:39 - How to build and scale a two-side marketplace</p><p>30:37 - The role of Carro in the marketplace</p><p>35:17 - Carro’s expansion playbook across SEA</p><p>44:20 - What the future holds for Carro and Southeast Asia</p><p>Many thanks to our guests <strong>Aaron Tan</strong>; host <strong>Oscar Ramos</strong>; producers <strong>Eva Shi</strong> and  <strong>Sagar Chaudhary</strong>; editor <strong>David</strong>; organizer <strong>Chinaccelerator</strong>; and sponsor<strong> People Squared</strong>. Be sure to check out our website <a href="https://chinaccelerator.com/"><strong>www.chinaccelerator.com</strong></a></p><p>Share, subscribe, review, enjoy!</p><p>To join our listener group on WeChat, please add SOSV Helper (WeChat ID: sosvhero) and ask for the group  invitation.</p><p>Follow us on LinkedIn:  <a href="https://www.linkedin.com/company/asia-startup-pulse/">https://www.linkedin.com/company/asia-startup-pulse</a></p><p>Email us: <a href="mailto:team@chinastartuppulse.com"><strong>team@chinastartuppulse.com</strong></a></p><p> </p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>Building the Biggest Used-car Marketplace in SEA, with Aaron Tan, founder of Carro</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Chinaccelerator, SOSV</itunes:author>
      <itunes:duration>00:42:43</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>This is a special episode which we recorded live on Clubhouse with our guest Aaron Tan, Founder of Carro, one of the biggest used-car marketplaces in Southeast Asia.

A programmer by training and a Venture Capitalist by profession, Aaron founded his first startup at 13 and had already sold two companies before turning 21. Carro, one of the companies he founded, is an automotive marketplace that offers a full-stack service for all aspects of car ownership and is currently present in Singapore, Indonesia, and Thailand.

In this episode, we will mainly discuss about how to build and scale a two-side marketplace in Southeast Asia and Carro’s playbook of expansion across the region. Moreover, we will put the spotlight on how Aaron’s previous experience in venture capital industry has impacted his decisions, and also how he takes inspiration from Chinese business models and applies the insights in an SEA context.

Side note: Aaron and Oscar frequently mention “William” in the conversation. The William they are referring to is William Bao Bean, GP at SOSV and MD at Chinaccelerator &amp; MOX.</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>This is a special episode which we recorded live on Clubhouse with our guest Aaron Tan, Founder of Carro, one of the biggest used-car marketplaces in Southeast Asia.

A programmer by training and a Venture Capitalist by profession, Aaron founded his first startup at 13 and had already sold two companies before turning 21. Carro, one of the companies he founded, is an automotive marketplace that offers a full-stack service for all aspects of car ownership and is currently present in Singapore, Indonesia, and Thailand.

In this episode, we will mainly discuss about how to build and scale a two-side marketplace in Southeast Asia and Carro’s playbook of expansion across the region. Moreover, we will put the spotlight on how Aaron’s previous experience in venture capital industry has impacted his decisions, and also how he takes inspiration from Chinese business models and applies the insights in an SEA context.

Side note: Aaron and Oscar frequently mention “William” in the conversation. The William they are referring to is William Bao Bean, GP at SOSV and MD at Chinaccelerator &amp; MOX.</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>accelerator, carro, automotive, china, go global, founder, southeast asia, chinaccelerator, softbank, startup, venture capital, used-car, tech, scale, sea, marketplace, expansion</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:episode>159</itunes:episode>
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      <title>Why Experimentation is Imperative to a Startup&apos;s Success with Mukesh Bansal, Co-founder of Phable, and Riaz Mehta, Founder of allrites</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>In this episode, we invite Mukesh Bansal, Founder and CEO of Phable, a healthcare startup from India that recently raised a $12 million Series A; and Riaz Mehta, Founder and CEO, of allrites, Asia’s leading B2B marketplace for film and TV content. Our guests bring with them a cumulative 40+ years of building, and running businesses across Asia. We dive deep into what makes experimentation a pre-requisite to running a successful startup and how small changes can have a colossal impact on the business.</p><p><strong>Show Notes:</strong></p><p>2:26 - Introduction to Mukesh Bansal and Riaz Mehta</p><p>5:56 - Experimentation in a startup context</p><p>9:54 - How the healthcare industry encourage/discourage experimentation</p><p>13:08 - Source of inspiration in deciding about what and how to experiment</p><p>20:49 - The The Minimum Viable Experiment</p><p>25:58 - Framework for prioritizing action items</p><p>31:41 - Should founders go against their own beliefs and convictions</p><p>41:14 - How COVID has impacted experimentation</p><p>46:47 - Actionable advice to aspiring entrepreneurs</p><p> </p><p><strong>Our 8x8 Global Speakers Series event is taking place on April 10th, where we bring 8 amazing speakers to share their insights in 8 minutes on building, running, and scaling businesses across Asia. Join us online via Zoom or offline in Shanghai.</strong></p><p><strong>RSVP here: </strong><a href="https://chinaccelerator.com/8x8-speakers-series/"><strong>https://chinaccelerator.com/8x8-speakers-series/</strong></a></p><p> </p><p>Many thanks to our guests <strong>Mukesh Bansal</strong> and <strong>Riaz Mehta</strong>; host <strong>Oscar Ramos</strong>; producers <strong>Eva Shi</strong> and  <strong>Sagar Chaudhary</strong>; editor <strong>David</strong>; organizer <strong>Chinaccelerator</strong>; and sponsor<strong> People Squared</strong>. Be sure to check out our website <a href="https://chinaccelerator.com/"><strong>www.chinaccelerator.com</strong></a></p><p>Share, subscribe, review, enjoy!</p><p>To join our listener group on WeChat, please add SOSV Helper (WeChat ID: sosvhero) and ask for the group  invitation.</p><p>Follow us on LinkedIn:  <a href="https://www.linkedin.com/company/asia-startup-pulse/">https://www.linkedin.com/company/asia-startup-pulse</a></p><p>Email us: <a href="mailto:team@chinastartuppulse.com"><strong>team@chinastartuppulse.com</strong></a></p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Thu, 1 Apr 2021 13:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Chinaccelerator, SOSV, Oscar Ramos)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>In this episode, we invite Mukesh Bansal, Founder and CEO of Phable, a healthcare startup from India that recently raised a $12 million Series A; and Riaz Mehta, Founder and CEO, of allrites, Asia’s leading B2B marketplace for film and TV content. Our guests bring with them a cumulative 40+ years of building, and running businesses across Asia. We dive deep into what makes experimentation a pre-requisite to running a successful startup and how small changes can have a colossal impact on the business.</p><p><strong>Show Notes:</strong></p><p>2:26 - Introduction to Mukesh Bansal and Riaz Mehta</p><p>5:56 - Experimentation in a startup context</p><p>9:54 - How the healthcare industry encourage/discourage experimentation</p><p>13:08 - Source of inspiration in deciding about what and how to experiment</p><p>20:49 - The The Minimum Viable Experiment</p><p>25:58 - Framework for prioritizing action items</p><p>31:41 - Should founders go against their own beliefs and convictions</p><p>41:14 - How COVID has impacted experimentation</p><p>46:47 - Actionable advice to aspiring entrepreneurs</p><p> </p><p><strong>Our 8x8 Global Speakers Series event is taking place on April 10th, where we bring 8 amazing speakers to share their insights in 8 minutes on building, running, and scaling businesses across Asia. Join us online via Zoom or offline in Shanghai.</strong></p><p><strong>RSVP here: </strong><a href="https://chinaccelerator.com/8x8-speakers-series/"><strong>https://chinaccelerator.com/8x8-speakers-series/</strong></a></p><p> </p><p>Many thanks to our guests <strong>Mukesh Bansal</strong> and <strong>Riaz Mehta</strong>; host <strong>Oscar Ramos</strong>; producers <strong>Eva Shi</strong> and  <strong>Sagar Chaudhary</strong>; editor <strong>David</strong>; organizer <strong>Chinaccelerator</strong>; and sponsor<strong> People Squared</strong>. Be sure to check out our website <a href="https://chinaccelerator.com/"><strong>www.chinaccelerator.com</strong></a></p><p>Share, subscribe, review, enjoy!</p><p>To join our listener group on WeChat, please add SOSV Helper (WeChat ID: sosvhero) and ask for the group  invitation.</p><p>Follow us on LinkedIn:  <a href="https://www.linkedin.com/company/asia-startup-pulse/">https://www.linkedin.com/company/asia-startup-pulse</a></p><p>Email us: <a href="mailto:team@chinastartuppulse.com"><strong>team@chinastartuppulse.com</strong></a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>Why Experimentation is Imperative to a Startup&apos;s Success with Mukesh Bansal, Co-founder of Phable, and Riaz Mehta, Founder of allrites</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Chinaccelerator, SOSV, Oscar Ramos</itunes:author>
      <itunes:duration>00:49:07</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>The age-old adage, “if at first you don’t succeed, try again,” is applicable to countless scenarios. However, in the startup world, trying new things until becoming successful is only half the story. In the startup world, things move at a rapid pace and ideas alone do not bring success. Success requires implementation and the right implementation process requires different business experiments in order to test and validate those ideas.

And today, we invite two successful startup founders to share their journeys on how they’ve experimented with different aspects of their business to reach where they are today. What is experimentation in the startup world? How must startups look at experimenting? And why is experimenting instrumental to a startup’s success? We answer these questions and more!

In this episode, we invite Mukesh Bansal, Founder and CEO of Phable, a healthcare startup from India that recently raised a $12 million Series A; and Riaz Mehta, Founder and CEO, of allrites, Asia’s leading B2B marketplace for film and TV content. Our guests bring with them a cumulative 40+ years of building, and running businesses across Asia. We dive deep into what makes experimentation a pre-requisite to running a successful startup and how small changes can have a colossal impact on the business.</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>The age-old adage, “if at first you don’t succeed, try again,” is applicable to countless scenarios. However, in the startup world, trying new things until becoming successful is only half the story. In the startup world, things move at a rapid pace and ideas alone do not bring success. Success requires implementation and the right implementation process requires different business experiments in order to test and validate those ideas.

And today, we invite two successful startup founders to share their journeys on how they’ve experimented with different aspects of their business to reach where they are today. What is experimentation in the startup world? How must startups look at experimenting? And why is experimenting instrumental to a startup’s success? We answer these questions and more!

In this episode, we invite Mukesh Bansal, Founder and CEO of Phable, a healthcare startup from India that recently raised a $12 million Series A; and Riaz Mehta, Founder and CEO, of allrites, Asia’s leading B2B marketplace for film and TV content. Our guests bring with them a cumulative 40+ years of building, and running businesses across Asia. We dive deep into what makes experimentation a pre-requisite to running a successful startup and how small changes can have a colossal impact on the business.</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>accelerator, vc, entrepreneurship, allrites, healthcare, experimentation, southeast asia, chinaccelerator, health, india, startup, venture capital, entrepreneur, mvp, experimenting, entertainment, phable, entrepreneurs, minimum viable product</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
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      <itunes:episode>158</itunes:episode>
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      <title>Evaluating the Rise of SaaS in China with Shao Lee, Partner at Global Founders Capital</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>Today, we invite Shao Lee, Partner at Global Founders Capital, who spearheads their China operations. We talk about GFC’s investment thesis and their unique proposition of Geographical Arbitrage. We dive deeper into understanding the Chinese ecosystem and the drivers of enterprise SaaS in China. As a leading investor in the TMT/ SaaS space, Shao shares his insights on how GFC evaluates enterprise SaaS companies in China.</p><p><strong>Show Notes</strong></p><p>01:19 - Introduction to Shao Lee and motivations to become a VC</p><p>04:18 - What is Global Founders Capital?</p><p>05:53 - Bringing the Rocket Internet model to Asia</p><p>10:19 - GFC’s Geographical Arbitrage</p><p>13:00 - How to discover new business models?</p><p>14:45 - Why is it time for Enterprise investment in China?</p><p>17:10 - Trends in Chinese companies overseas expansion</p><p>19:00 - GFC’s investment decision-making process</p><p>20:34 - Founder’s pedigree in the decision-making process</p><p>25:45 - Late entrant to China: Is the market still worth entering for VCs?</p><p>27:40 - China’s competitive value proposition in global market</p><p>32:24 - VC Trends for 2021: The Rise of Enterprise SaaS</p><p>35:22 - The drivers of Enterprise SaaS</p><p>38:24 - Evaluating Chinese Enterprise SaaS companies</p><p>Many thanks to our guest <strong>Shao Lee</strong>; host <strong>Oscar Ramos</strong>; producers <strong>Eva Shi</strong> and  <strong>Sagar Chaudhary</strong>; editor <strong>David</strong>; organizer <strong>Chinaccelerator</strong>; and sponsor<strong> People Squared</strong>. Be sure to check out our website <a href="https://chinaccelerator.com/"><strong>www.chinaccelerator.com</strong></a></p><p>Share, subscribe, review, enjoy!</p><p>To join our listener group on WeChat, please add SOSV Helper (WeChat ID: sosvhero) and ask for the group  invitation.</p><p>Follow us on LinkedIn:  <a href="https://www.linkedin.com/company/asia-startup-pulse/">https://www.linkedin.com/company/asia-startup-pulse</a></p><p>Email us: <a href="mailto:team@chinastartuppulse.com"><strong>team@chinastartuppulse.com</strong></a></p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Thu, 25 Mar 2021 13:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Chinaccelerator, SOSV, Oscar Ramos)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Today, we invite Shao Lee, Partner at Global Founders Capital, who spearheads their China operations. We talk about GFC’s investment thesis and their unique proposition of Geographical Arbitrage. We dive deeper into understanding the Chinese ecosystem and the drivers of enterprise SaaS in China. As a leading investor in the TMT/ SaaS space, Shao shares his insights on how GFC evaluates enterprise SaaS companies in China.</p><p><strong>Show Notes</strong></p><p>01:19 - Introduction to Shao Lee and motivations to become a VC</p><p>04:18 - What is Global Founders Capital?</p><p>05:53 - Bringing the Rocket Internet model to Asia</p><p>10:19 - GFC’s Geographical Arbitrage</p><p>13:00 - How to discover new business models?</p><p>14:45 - Why is it time for Enterprise investment in China?</p><p>17:10 - Trends in Chinese companies overseas expansion</p><p>19:00 - GFC’s investment decision-making process</p><p>20:34 - Founder’s pedigree in the decision-making process</p><p>25:45 - Late entrant to China: Is the market still worth entering for VCs?</p><p>27:40 - China’s competitive value proposition in global market</p><p>32:24 - VC Trends for 2021: The Rise of Enterprise SaaS</p><p>35:22 - The drivers of Enterprise SaaS</p><p>38:24 - Evaluating Chinese Enterprise SaaS companies</p><p>Many thanks to our guest <strong>Shao Lee</strong>; host <strong>Oscar Ramos</strong>; producers <strong>Eva Shi</strong> and  <strong>Sagar Chaudhary</strong>; editor <strong>David</strong>; organizer <strong>Chinaccelerator</strong>; and sponsor<strong> People Squared</strong>. Be sure to check out our website <a href="https://chinaccelerator.com/"><strong>www.chinaccelerator.com</strong></a></p><p>Share, subscribe, review, enjoy!</p><p>To join our listener group on WeChat, please add SOSV Helper (WeChat ID: sosvhero) and ask for the group  invitation.</p><p>Follow us on LinkedIn:  <a href="https://www.linkedin.com/company/asia-startup-pulse/">https://www.linkedin.com/company/asia-startup-pulse</a></p><p>Email us: <a href="mailto:team@chinastartuppulse.com"><strong>team@chinastartuppulse.com</strong></a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>Evaluating the Rise of SaaS in China with Shao Lee, Partner at Global Founders Capital</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Chinaccelerator, SOSV, Oscar Ramos</itunes:author>
      <itunes:duration>00:44:51</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>Global Founder’s Capital, in spite of its global presence, has been a late entrant to China. However, in a very short time in the region, they’ve become a force to reckon with investing in some very promising companies. 

Coincidently, enterprise SaaS in China has been gaining speedy momentum in the recent past. Why is this the right time for enterprise investment in China? Is China still relevant for incoming VCs? Why is enterprise SaaS a must-watch trend for 2021 and what is driving this growth?

In this episode, we invite Shao Lee, Partner at Global Founders Capital, who spearheads their China operations. We talk about GFC’s investment thesis and their unique proposition of Geographical Arbitrage. We dive deeper into understanding the Chinese ecosystem and the drivers of enterprise SaaS in China. As a leading investor in the TMT/ SaaS space, Shao shares his insights on how GFC evaluates enterprise SaaS companies in China.</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>Global Founder’s Capital, in spite of its global presence, has been a late entrant to China. However, in a very short time in the region, they’ve become a force to reckon with investing in some very promising companies. 

Coincidently, enterprise SaaS in China has been gaining speedy momentum in the recent past. Why is this the right time for enterprise investment in China? Is China still relevant for incoming VCs? Why is enterprise SaaS a must-watch trend for 2021 and what is driving this growth?

In this episode, we invite Shao Lee, Partner at Global Founders Capital, who spearheads their China operations. We talk about GFC’s investment thesis and their unique proposition of Geographical Arbitrage. We dive deeper into understanding the Chinese ecosystem and the drivers of enterprise SaaS in China. As a leading investor in the TMT/ SaaS space, Shao shares his insights on how GFC evaluates enterprise SaaS companies in China.</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>accelerator, tmt, global founders capital, saas, gfc, startup ecosystem, vc, china, capital, china saas, china tech, chinaccelerator, startup, venture capital, finance, chinese startups, enterprise, tech startups, china enterprise saas, asia, rocket internet, investment</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
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      <itunes:episode>157</itunes:episode>
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      <title>Secret Sauce of ByteDance’s Massive Boom with Matthew Brennan, Book Author of “Attention Factory; The story of TikTok and China’s ByteDance”</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>Today, we invite one of our special friends Matthew Brennan, author of “Attention Factory; The story of TikTok and China’s ByteDance”. He is often featured in global media and has delivered presentations on Chinese digital innovation to global firms such as Google, Tencent, DHL, etc. Having monitored the Chinese tech ecosystem closely for a number of years, Matthew is well-positioned to answer our questions, dig deeper into ByteDance’s remarkable success, and share his insights on the mobile-tech environment in the East and West. We will also discuss the digital marketing schemes partaking in all startups and all kinds of business sizes. Last but not the least, some key insights on future tech innovations that can be observed from the ByteDance case.</p><p>You can find the book on Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/Attention-Factory-TikTok-Chinas-ByteDance/dp/B08L3NW6VM/<br /> </p><p><strong>Show Notes:</strong></p><p>02:09 Introduce Matthew Brennan</p><p>03:20 Why ByteDance is able to build a global product, TikTok</p><p>05:57 TikTok, the product and technology</p><p>09:42 TikTok’s from-zero-to-one journey</p><p>16:30 TikTok’s monetization model and their new initiatives</p><p>22:20 Lessons from the success of ByteDance</p><p>30:40 Contact Matthew</p><p>Many thanks to our guest <strong>Matthew Brennan</strong>; host <strong>Ryan Shuken</strong>; producers <strong>Eva Shi</strong> and  <strong>Sagar Chaudhary</strong>; editor <strong>David</strong>; organizer <strong>Chinaccelerator</strong>; and sponsor<strong> People Squared</strong>. Be sure to check out our website <a href="https://chinaccelerator.com/"><strong>www.chinaccelerator.com</strong></a></p><p>Share, subscribe, review, enjoy!</p><p>To join our listener group on WeChat, please add SOSV Helper (WeChat ID: sosvhero) and ask for the group  invitation.</p><p>Follow us on LinkedIn:  <a href="https://www.linkedin.com/company/asia-startup-pulse/">https://www.linkedin.com/company/asia-startup-pulse</a></p><p>Email us: <a href="mailto:team@chinastartuppulse.com"><strong>team@chinastartuppulse.com</strong></a></p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Thu, 18 Mar 2021 13:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Chinaccelerator, SOSV)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Today, we invite one of our special friends Matthew Brennan, author of “Attention Factory; The story of TikTok and China’s ByteDance”. He is often featured in global media and has delivered presentations on Chinese digital innovation to global firms such as Google, Tencent, DHL, etc. Having monitored the Chinese tech ecosystem closely for a number of years, Matthew is well-positioned to answer our questions, dig deeper into ByteDance’s remarkable success, and share his insights on the mobile-tech environment in the East and West. We will also discuss the digital marketing schemes partaking in all startups and all kinds of business sizes. Last but not the least, some key insights on future tech innovations that can be observed from the ByteDance case.</p><p>You can find the book on Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/Attention-Factory-TikTok-Chinas-ByteDance/dp/B08L3NW6VM/<br /> </p><p><strong>Show Notes:</strong></p><p>02:09 Introduce Matthew Brennan</p><p>03:20 Why ByteDance is able to build a global product, TikTok</p><p>05:57 TikTok, the product and technology</p><p>09:42 TikTok’s from-zero-to-one journey</p><p>16:30 TikTok’s monetization model and their new initiatives</p><p>22:20 Lessons from the success of ByteDance</p><p>30:40 Contact Matthew</p><p>Many thanks to our guest <strong>Matthew Brennan</strong>; host <strong>Ryan Shuken</strong>; producers <strong>Eva Shi</strong> and  <strong>Sagar Chaudhary</strong>; editor <strong>David</strong>; organizer <strong>Chinaccelerator</strong>; and sponsor<strong> People Squared</strong>. Be sure to check out our website <a href="https://chinaccelerator.com/"><strong>www.chinaccelerator.com</strong></a></p><p>Share, subscribe, review, enjoy!</p><p>To join our listener group on WeChat, please add SOSV Helper (WeChat ID: sosvhero) and ask for the group  invitation.</p><p>Follow us on LinkedIn:  <a href="https://www.linkedin.com/company/asia-startup-pulse/">https://www.linkedin.com/company/asia-startup-pulse</a></p><p>Email us: <a href="mailto:team@chinastartuppulse.com"><strong>team@chinastartuppulse.com</strong></a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>Secret Sauce of ByteDance’s Massive Boom with Matthew Brennan, Book Author of “Attention Factory; The story of TikTok and China’s ByteDance”</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Chinaccelerator, SOSV</itunes:author>
      <itunes:duration>00:33:19</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>The likes of Alibaba, Tencent, and Pinduoduo have managed to rise as tech giants in China but have failed to leverage this dominance and influence to a global scale. One such company that has managed to strip away from that label and  is successful in expanding overseas and in branding its product as a global pass is ByteDance. But, what has enabled it to do what most Chinese companies have not been able to do? We dive deep into answering these questions.

What is the key differentiator of ByteDance compared to other prominent video-platform players? What breakthroughs has ByteDance overcome to flourish worldwide? What takeaways can be extracted from the gala of TikTok’s global success? 

In this episode, we invite one of our special friends Matthew Brennan, author of “Attention Factory; The story of TikTok and China’s ByteDance”. He is often featured in global media and has delivered presentations on Chinese digital innovation to global firms such as Google, Tencent, DHL, etc. Having monitored the Chinese tech ecosystem closely for a number of years, Matthew is well-positioned to answer our questions, dig deeper into ByteDance’s remarkable success, and share his insights on the mobile-tech environment in the East and West. We will also discuss the digital marketing schemes partaking in all startups and all kinds of business sizes. Last but not the least, some key insights on future tech innovations that can be observed from the ByteDance case.</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>The likes of Alibaba, Tencent, and Pinduoduo have managed to rise as tech giants in China but have failed to leverage this dominance and influence to a global scale. One such company that has managed to strip away from that label and  is successful in expanding overseas and in branding its product as a global pass is ByteDance. But, what has enabled it to do what most Chinese companies have not been able to do? We dive deep into answering these questions.

What is the key differentiator of ByteDance compared to other prominent video-platform players? What breakthroughs has ByteDance overcome to flourish worldwide? What takeaways can be extracted from the gala of TikTok’s global success? 

In this episode, we invite one of our special friends Matthew Brennan, author of “Attention Factory; The story of TikTok and China’s ByteDance”. He is often featured in global media and has delivered presentations on Chinese digital innovation to global firms such as Google, Tencent, DHL, etc. Having monitored the Chinese tech ecosystem closely for a number of years, Matthew is well-positioned to answer our questions, dig deeper into ByteDance’s remarkable success, and share his insights on the mobile-tech environment in the East and West. We will also discuss the digital marketing schemes partaking in all startups and all kinds of business sizes. Last but not the least, some key insights on future tech innovations that can be observed from the ByteDance case.</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>short video, toutiao, user generated content, video, china startups, tiktok, china tech, digital innovation, chinese tech ecosystem, product, mobile-only market, mobile-tech, chinese startups, chinese tech firms, bytedance, globalization, monetization, overseas expansion</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
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      <itunes:episode>156</itunes:episode>
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      <title>The Rise of Technification in Southeast Asia, with Peng T. Ong, Co-founder and Managing Partner of Monk&apos;s Hill Ventures</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>In this episode, we talk about Peng’s journey as an investor and how he perceives the great potential in Southeast Asia. More importantly, he summarizes a very important trend in SEA’s startup ecosystem, "Technification". We also talk about the impact that China's Internet giants have on SEA through investments and M&A.</p><p>Show Notes:</p><p>1:54 Peng’s journey as an investor</p><p>3:22 Main differences btw seed round and Series A</p><p>9:15 More capital investment in SEA</p><p>10:20 The most interesting trend in SEA</p><p>10:56 “Technification” in China</p><p>12:24 The opportunities of “technification” in SEA</p><p>14:33 “There is no way for a company to grow that fast without technology”</p><p>17:31 The core DNA of a successful founding team</p><p>18:54 China’s role in SEA’s service industry</p><p>22:22 The role of Chinese and Japanese corporate venture capital in SEA</p><p>26:20 The infrastructure development in SEA</p><p>28:25 A hard push on deep technology in SEA?</p><p>Many thanks to our guest <strong>Peng T.Ong</strong>; host <strong>Oscar Ramos</strong>; producers  <strong>Eva Shi</strong> and  <strong>Sagar Chaudhary</strong>; editor <strong>David</strong>; organizer <strong>Chinaccelerator</strong>; and sponsor<strong> People Squared</strong>. Be sure to check out our website <a href="https://chinaccelerator.com/"><strong>www.chinaccelerator.com</strong></a></p><p>Share, subscribe, review, enjoy!</p><p>Follow us on LinkedIn:  <a href="https://www.linkedin.com/company/asia-startup-pulse">https://www.linkedin.com/company/asia-startup-pulse</a></p><p>Email us: <a href="mailto:team@chinastartuppulse.com"><strong>team@chinastartuppulse.com</strong></a></p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Fri, 12 Mar 2021 13:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Chinaccelerator)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>In this episode, we talk about Peng’s journey as an investor and how he perceives the great potential in Southeast Asia. More importantly, he summarizes a very important trend in SEA’s startup ecosystem, "Technification". We also talk about the impact that China's Internet giants have on SEA through investments and M&A.</p><p>Show Notes:</p><p>1:54 Peng’s journey as an investor</p><p>3:22 Main differences btw seed round and Series A</p><p>9:15 More capital investment in SEA</p><p>10:20 The most interesting trend in SEA</p><p>10:56 “Technification” in China</p><p>12:24 The opportunities of “technification” in SEA</p><p>14:33 “There is no way for a company to grow that fast without technology”</p><p>17:31 The core DNA of a successful founding team</p><p>18:54 China’s role in SEA’s service industry</p><p>22:22 The role of Chinese and Japanese corporate venture capital in SEA</p><p>26:20 The infrastructure development in SEA</p><p>28:25 A hard push on deep technology in SEA?</p><p>Many thanks to our guest <strong>Peng T.Ong</strong>; host <strong>Oscar Ramos</strong>; producers  <strong>Eva Shi</strong> and  <strong>Sagar Chaudhary</strong>; editor <strong>David</strong>; organizer <strong>Chinaccelerator</strong>; and sponsor<strong> People Squared</strong>. Be sure to check out our website <a href="https://chinaccelerator.com/"><strong>www.chinaccelerator.com</strong></a></p><p>Share, subscribe, review, enjoy!</p><p>Follow us on LinkedIn:  <a href="https://www.linkedin.com/company/asia-startup-pulse">https://www.linkedin.com/company/asia-startup-pulse</a></p><p>Email us: <a href="mailto:team@chinastartuppulse.com"><strong>team@chinastartuppulse.com</strong></a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>The Rise of Technification in Southeast Asia, with Peng T. Ong, Co-founder and Managing Partner of Monk&apos;s Hill Ventures</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Chinaccelerator</itunes:author>
      <itunes:duration>00:33:35</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>We are very honoured to invite Peng T. Ong, co-founder and managing partner of Monk&apos;s Hill Ventures, to join our first episode of Asia Startup Pulse today.

Monk’s Hill Ventures is a venture capital firm investing in early-stage tech companies, primarily Series A, in Southeast Asia. Peng is an industry veteran with over 25 years of experience as an entrepreneur, founder, and investor in Silicon Valley and in Asia. He is based in Indonesia and is a board member of Glints, ELSA, Finaxar, and Intelligent Video Solutions. Prior to Monk’s Hill Ventures, he was a Venture Partner at GSR Ventures in China. 

In this episode, we talk about Peng’s journey as an investor and how he perceives the great potential in Southeast Asia. More importantly, he summarizes a very important trend in SEA’s startup ecosystem, &quot;Technification&quot;. We also talk about the impact that China&apos;s Internet giants have on SEA through investments and M&amp;A.
</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>We are very honoured to invite Peng T. Ong, co-founder and managing partner of Monk&apos;s Hill Ventures, to join our first episode of Asia Startup Pulse today.

Monk’s Hill Ventures is a venture capital firm investing in early-stage tech companies, primarily Series A, in Southeast Asia. Peng is an industry veteran with over 25 years of experience as an entrepreneur, founder, and investor in Silicon Valley and in Asia. He is based in Indonesia and is a board member of Glints, ELSA, Finaxar, and Intelligent Video Solutions. Prior to Monk’s Hill Ventures, he was a Venture Partner at GSR Ventures in China. 

In this episode, we talk about Peng’s journey as an investor and how he perceives the great potential in Southeast Asia. More importantly, he summarizes a very important trend in SEA’s startup ecosystem, &quot;Technification&quot;. We also talk about the impact that China&apos;s Internet giants have on SEA through investments and M&amp;A.
</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>accelerator, technification, deep tech, investor, fundraising, indonesia, china, founder, singapore, cross border, southeast asia, internet technology, technology, venture capital, entrepreneur, service industry, a, early investment, corporate venture capital, m&amp;a</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:episode>155</itunes:episode>
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      <title>Is the GameStop saga a defining moment for DeFi with Michael Friedman, CFO of Xinhua Pictures; and Aaron Choi,  VP of Global Business Development at Kava Labs</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>Our first guest is Michael Friedman, CFO of Xinhua Pictures. Mike previously held the position of Director at Shune River Capital where he was responsible for investment, financial analysis, and risk management. He has over two decades of experience in global financial markets.</p><p>Our second guest today is Aaron Choi. Aaron is the VP of Global Business Development for Kava Labs, a blockchain solutions platform providing DeFi services such as stable coins, bonds, and lending to crypto users across many blockchain networks.</p><p><strong>Show Notes:</strong></p><p><strong>[02:43]  What happened with GameStop?</strong></p><p><strong>[13:59] Centralisation vs Decentralisation. Is GameStop the pivotal moment for DeFi? What are its merits and demerits?</strong></p><p><strong>[34:55] Closing Remarks</strong></p><p>Many thanks to our guests Michael Friedman and Aaron Choi; host <strong>Oscar Ramos</strong>; producers  <strong>Eva Shi</strong> and  <strong>Sagar Chaudhary</strong>; editor <strong>David</strong>; organizer <strong>Chinaccelerator</strong>; and sponsor<strong> People Squared</strong>. Be sure to check out our website <a href="https://chinaccelerator.com/"><strong>www.chinaccelerator.com</strong></a></p><p>Share, subscribe, review, enjoy!</p><p>Follow us on LinkedIn:  <a href="https://chinastartuppulse.simplecast.com/episodes/www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/"><strong>www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/</strong></a></p><p>Email us: <a href="mailto:team@chinastartuppulse.com"><strong>team@chinastartuppulse.com</strong></a></p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Sat, 13 Feb 2021 01:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Oscar Ramos, SOSV, Chinaccelerator)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Our first guest is Michael Friedman, CFO of Xinhua Pictures. Mike previously held the position of Director at Shune River Capital where he was responsible for investment, financial analysis, and risk management. He has over two decades of experience in global financial markets.</p><p>Our second guest today is Aaron Choi. Aaron is the VP of Global Business Development for Kava Labs, a blockchain solutions platform providing DeFi services such as stable coins, bonds, and lending to crypto users across many blockchain networks.</p><p><strong>Show Notes:</strong></p><p><strong>[02:43]  What happened with GameStop?</strong></p><p><strong>[13:59] Centralisation vs Decentralisation. Is GameStop the pivotal moment for DeFi? What are its merits and demerits?</strong></p><p><strong>[34:55] Closing Remarks</strong></p><p>Many thanks to our guests Michael Friedman and Aaron Choi; host <strong>Oscar Ramos</strong>; producers  <strong>Eva Shi</strong> and  <strong>Sagar Chaudhary</strong>; editor <strong>David</strong>; organizer <strong>Chinaccelerator</strong>; and sponsor<strong> People Squared</strong>. Be sure to check out our website <a href="https://chinaccelerator.com/"><strong>www.chinaccelerator.com</strong></a></p><p>Share, subscribe, review, enjoy!</p><p>Follow us on LinkedIn:  <a href="https://chinastartuppulse.simplecast.com/episodes/www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/"><strong>www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/</strong></a></p><p>Email us: <a href="mailto:team@chinastartuppulse.com"><strong>team@chinastartuppulse.com</strong></a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>Is the GameStop saga a defining moment for DeFi with Michael Friedman, CFO of Xinhua Pictures; and Aaron Choi,  VP of Global Business Development at Kava Labs</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Oscar Ramos, SOSV, Chinaccelerator</itunes:author>
      <itunes:duration>00:38:56</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>Welcome to another episode of the China Startup Pulse. Today we talk about GameStop, a company that has the global financial markets buzzing. What we’ve seen with GameStop is a very unusual incident and so, we are bringing not one, but two guests on the episode who bring differing perspectives on what happened with GameStop and what it represents. With everything that has happened with the GameStop stock in the last several days, ultimately leading to some brokerages restricting retail investors from buying the stock, an interesting debate around centralization vs decentralization has surfaced.

Is the GameStop saga a pivotal moment for DeFi? Do we need more decentralization in the financial markets? Does DeFi have enough merits to transcend the traditional financial markets or is it too early to make that call?

And we have the right guests to share their perspectives on this matter! Our first guest is Michael Friedman, CFO of Xinhua Pictures. Mike previously held the position of Director at Shune River Capital where he was responsible for investment, financial analysis, and risk management. He has over two decades of experience in global financial markets.

Our second guest today is Aaron Choi. Aaron is the VP of Global Business Development for Kava Labs, a blockchain solutions platform providing DeFi services such as stable coins, bonds, and lending to crypto users across many blockchain networks.

Previously, Aaron led the International Business for BTCC, one of the earliest and longest-running Bitcoin exchanges. He is an expert in the crypto industry and digital advertising and marketing. He is also an advisor to several blockchain projects where he advises on blockchain, token issuance, and token economy-related matters.

Please remember, the views expressed in the episode are strictly for educational purposes and must not be taken as investment advice. </itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>Welcome to another episode of the China Startup Pulse. Today we talk about GameStop, a company that has the global financial markets buzzing. What we’ve seen with GameStop is a very unusual incident and so, we are bringing not one, but two guests on the episode who bring differing perspectives on what happened with GameStop and what it represents. With everything that has happened with the GameStop stock in the last several days, ultimately leading to some brokerages restricting retail investors from buying the stock, an interesting debate around centralization vs decentralization has surfaced.

Is the GameStop saga a pivotal moment for DeFi? Do we need more decentralization in the financial markets? Does DeFi have enough merits to transcend the traditional financial markets or is it too early to make that call?

And we have the right guests to share their perspectives on this matter! Our first guest is Michael Friedman, CFO of Xinhua Pictures. Mike previously held the position of Director at Shune River Capital where he was responsible for investment, financial analysis, and risk management. He has over two decades of experience in global financial markets.

Our second guest today is Aaron Choi. Aaron is the VP of Global Business Development for Kava Labs, a blockchain solutions platform providing DeFi services such as stable coins, bonds, and lending to crypto users across many blockchain networks.

Previously, Aaron led the International Business for BTCC, one of the earliest and longest-running Bitcoin exchanges. He is an expert in the crypto industry and digital advertising and marketing. He is also an advisor to several blockchain projects where he advises on blockchain, token issuance, and token economy-related matters.

Please remember, the views expressed in the episode are strictly for educational purposes and must not be taken as investment advice. </itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>early stage, accelerator, decentralized finance, fintech, decentralized, crypto, startup ecosystem, vc, defi, investments, startup, venture capital, trading, finance, blockchain, robinhood, bitcoin, gamestop</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
      <itunes:episodeType>bonus</itunes:episodeType>
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      <title>Capping off 2020 with a Big Announcement</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>2020 is over, finally! Happy New Year to everyone! In today's episode, we would like to give you a quick recap of China Startup Pulse in 2020 and also make a major announcement in the end.</p><p><strong>Show Notes:</strong></p><p>00:00 Catch up with Oscar and Ryan</p><p>06:38 Episodes featuring founders</p><p>22:14 Episodes featuring investors</p><p>30:40 The big announcement</p><p>Big, big, big thanks to our hosts <strong>Oscar Ramos </strong>and <strong>Ryan Shuken</strong>; producers  <strong>Eva Shi</strong> and  <strong>Sagar Chaudhary</strong>; editor <strong>David</strong>; organizer <strong>Chinaccelerator</strong>; and sponsor<strong> People Squared</strong>. Be sure to check out our website <a href="https://chinaccelerator.com/"><strong>www.chinaccelerator.com</strong></a></p><p>Share, subscribe, review, enjoy!</p><p>Follow us on LinkedIn:  <a href="https://chinastartuppulse.simplecast.com/episodes/www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/"><strong>www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/</strong></a></p><p>Email us: <a href="mailto:team@chinastartuppulse.com"><strong>team@chinastartuppulse.com</strong></a></p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Thu, 31 Dec 2020 01:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Chinaccelerator, SOSV)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>2020 is over, finally! Happy New Year to everyone! In today's episode, we would like to give you a quick recap of China Startup Pulse in 2020 and also make a major announcement in the end.</p><p><strong>Show Notes:</strong></p><p>00:00 Catch up with Oscar and Ryan</p><p>06:38 Episodes featuring founders</p><p>22:14 Episodes featuring investors</p><p>30:40 The big announcement</p><p>Big, big, big thanks to our hosts <strong>Oscar Ramos </strong>and <strong>Ryan Shuken</strong>; producers  <strong>Eva Shi</strong> and  <strong>Sagar Chaudhary</strong>; editor <strong>David</strong>; organizer <strong>Chinaccelerator</strong>; and sponsor<strong> People Squared</strong>. Be sure to check out our website <a href="https://chinaccelerator.com/"><strong>www.chinaccelerator.com</strong></a></p><p>Share, subscribe, review, enjoy!</p><p>Follow us on LinkedIn:  <a href="https://chinastartuppulse.simplecast.com/episodes/www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/"><strong>www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/</strong></a></p><p>Email us: <a href="mailto:team@chinastartuppulse.com"><strong>team@chinastartuppulse.com</strong></a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>Capping off 2020 with a Big Announcement</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Chinaccelerator, SOSV</itunes:author>
      <itunes:duration>00:36:36</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>Let’s start with a thought that would resonate with most people around the world: “2020 is over, finally!”. And as we bid farewell to this year, we are launching this episode today to thank you and to end this challenging yet critical year with a major announcement.

But before announcing it, we would like to give you a quick recap of China Startup Pulse in 2020. We selected several conversations we had with founders such as Citybox’s co-founder Neo and Snapask’s founder Timothy, and also investors such as Pegasus Tech Venture’s China General Manager Sophie and Panda Capital’s co-founder Peter. You will hear what we discussed with them and why we liked these conversations. 

Apart from the conversations we introduced in today’s episode, we also interviewed many early explorers of China’s Internet economy such as Qunar’s founder Fritz Demopoulos and AliMama’s Donna Li, and also experts from iDreamSky, Tencent (WeChat), and several other influential companies in China. 

Like everything else in the world, the pandemic turned out to be a central theme for several of our podcast episodes. We talked about Chinese companies’ overseas IPO and the rapid accession of China’s capital market in the post-COVID era. We also took a look at impact investing and how has it been impacted by COVID. We also looked deeper into two trendy topics in China from a founder’s perspective: new energy vehicles and DeFi. 

If you missed some of them or would like to re-listen to these interviews, you can still find them on all major podcast apps.

💪 Note that Chinaccelerator’s 10th anniversary documentary will be published very soon. Please follow Chinaccelerator on Youtube and stay tuned!
👩‍💻 If you are interested in joining the podcast community, please add SOSV helper (WeChat ID: sosvhero) to join the WeChat group or join the WhatsApp group here: https://chat.whatsapp.com/I6fGCL6jh9P0kTrfUQOsB4

And now onto the BIG ANNOUNCEMENT. We announce the big news at the end of this episode. Be sure to check it out! 

Happy New Year to all of you!!! We at China Startup Pulse Podcast hope that 2021 brings your a plethora of happiness, goodwill and good health. See you in the new year. We’ll be waiting.
</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>Let’s start with a thought that would resonate with most people around the world: “2020 is over, finally!”. And as we bid farewell to this year, we are launching this episode today to thank you and to end this challenging yet critical year with a major announcement.

But before announcing it, we would like to give you a quick recap of China Startup Pulse in 2020. We selected several conversations we had with founders such as Citybox’s co-founder Neo and Snapask’s founder Timothy, and also investors such as Pegasus Tech Venture’s China General Manager Sophie and Panda Capital’s co-founder Peter. You will hear what we discussed with them and why we liked these conversations. 

Apart from the conversations we introduced in today’s episode, we also interviewed many early explorers of China’s Internet economy such as Qunar’s founder Fritz Demopoulos and AliMama’s Donna Li, and also experts from iDreamSky, Tencent (WeChat), and several other influential companies in China. 

Like everything else in the world, the pandemic turned out to be a central theme for several of our podcast episodes. We talked about Chinese companies’ overseas IPO and the rapid accession of China’s capital market in the post-COVID era. We also took a look at impact investing and how has it been impacted by COVID. We also looked deeper into two trendy topics in China from a founder’s perspective: new energy vehicles and DeFi. 

If you missed some of them or would like to re-listen to these interviews, you can still find them on all major podcast apps.

💪 Note that Chinaccelerator’s 10th anniversary documentary will be published very soon. Please follow Chinaccelerator on Youtube and stay tuned!
👩‍💻 If you are interested in joining the podcast community, please add SOSV helper (WeChat ID: sosvhero) to join the WeChat group or join the WhatsApp group here: https://chat.whatsapp.com/I6fGCL6jh9P0kTrfUQOsB4

And now onto the BIG ANNOUNCEMENT. We announce the big news at the end of this episode. Be sure to check it out! 

Happy New Year to all of you!!! We at China Startup Pulse Podcast hope that 2021 brings your a plethora of happiness, goodwill and good health. See you in the new year. We’ll be waiting.
</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>accelerator, new energy vehicles, wechat, alibaba, investor, vc, pandemic, founder, idreamsky, chinaccelerator, unmanned retail, sosv, defi, 2020, startup, ipo, edtech, alimama, fund, internet, pegasus tech ventures, qunar.com</itunes:keywords>
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      <title>Building a Growth Mindset; Storytelling 101 for Startups; and Lessons from the Pandemic: 8x8 Global Speaker Series (3/3) with Yara Paoli, Adam Najberg, and Shamik Talukder</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>Today we’re bringing you the final episode of our Chinaccelerator 8x8 Global Speakers Series where we invite some of the most accomplished members of the global startup ecosystem to share key lessons for startups in eight minutes or less.</p><p><strong>Show Notes:</strong></p><p><strong>02:18 - Yara Paoli</strong></p><p><strong>11:30 - Adam Najberg</strong></p><p><strong>19:27 - Shamik Talukder</strong></p><p>Our first speaker is Yara Paoli. Yara is the former VP of Growth at Skyscanner (acquired by Ctrip) and is currently the Co-Founder and Chief Growth Scientist of Growth OS, a growth enabler company. Having contributed to growing Skyscanner from a 32-employees small startup to a GBP 1.4 Billion  valued company with over 1,000 talented people working across 60+ markets, Yara is the perfect guest to talk about growth mindset, which she talks about in this episode.</p><p>Our next speaker is Adam Najberg, Global Head of Content at Alibaba Group and Former Global Director of Communications at DJI. Having been in the field of journalism and PR for over 25 years, Adam has amassed a wealth of experience in storytelling. Today, he talks about why storytelling is important for startups, and how someone else could tell their stories if startups don't do it themselves.</p><p>Finally, we have Shamik Talukder, co-founder of Be Tagged, an influencer marketing company, and the founding member of the largest Radio FM Network in India, Radio Mirchi, and former Vice President at Viacom 18 Media. In his talk today, he shares two important lessons that the covid19 pandemic has taught him and how he believes that could help startups.</p><p> </p><p>Many thanks to our guest Benjamin Qiu; host <strong>Oscar Ramos</strong>; producers  <strong>Eva Shi</strong> and  <strong>Sagar Chaudhary</strong>; editor <strong>David</strong>; organizer <strong>Chinaccelerator</strong>; and sponsor<strong> People Squared</strong>. Be sure to check out our website <a href="https://chinaccelerator.com/"><strong>www.chinaccelerator.com</strong></a></p><p>Share, subscribe, review, enjoy!</p><p>Follow us on LinkedIn:  <a href="https://chinastartuppulse.simplecast.com/episodes/www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/"><strong>www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/</strong></a></p><p>Email us: <a href="mailto:team@chinastartuppulse.com"><strong>team@chinastartuppulse.com</strong></a></p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Sun, 27 Dec 2020 01:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (SOSV, Chinaccelerator)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Today we’re bringing you the final episode of our Chinaccelerator 8x8 Global Speakers Series where we invite some of the most accomplished members of the global startup ecosystem to share key lessons for startups in eight minutes or less.</p><p><strong>Show Notes:</strong></p><p><strong>02:18 - Yara Paoli</strong></p><p><strong>11:30 - Adam Najberg</strong></p><p><strong>19:27 - Shamik Talukder</strong></p><p>Our first speaker is Yara Paoli. Yara is the former VP of Growth at Skyscanner (acquired by Ctrip) and is currently the Co-Founder and Chief Growth Scientist of Growth OS, a growth enabler company. Having contributed to growing Skyscanner from a 32-employees small startup to a GBP 1.4 Billion  valued company with over 1,000 talented people working across 60+ markets, Yara is the perfect guest to talk about growth mindset, which she talks about in this episode.</p><p>Our next speaker is Adam Najberg, Global Head of Content at Alibaba Group and Former Global Director of Communications at DJI. Having been in the field of journalism and PR for over 25 years, Adam has amassed a wealth of experience in storytelling. Today, he talks about why storytelling is important for startups, and how someone else could tell their stories if startups don't do it themselves.</p><p>Finally, we have Shamik Talukder, co-founder of Be Tagged, an influencer marketing company, and the founding member of the largest Radio FM Network in India, Radio Mirchi, and former Vice President at Viacom 18 Media. In his talk today, he shares two important lessons that the covid19 pandemic has taught him and how he believes that could help startups.</p><p> </p><p>Many thanks to our guest Benjamin Qiu; host <strong>Oscar Ramos</strong>; producers  <strong>Eva Shi</strong> and  <strong>Sagar Chaudhary</strong>; editor <strong>David</strong>; organizer <strong>Chinaccelerator</strong>; and sponsor<strong> People Squared</strong>. Be sure to check out our website <a href="https://chinaccelerator.com/"><strong>www.chinaccelerator.com</strong></a></p><p>Share, subscribe, review, enjoy!</p><p>Follow us on LinkedIn:  <a href="https://chinastartuppulse.simplecast.com/episodes/www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/"><strong>www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/</strong></a></p><p>Email us: <a href="mailto:team@chinastartuppulse.com"><strong>team@chinastartuppulse.com</strong></a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>Building a Growth Mindset; Storytelling 101 for Startups; and Lessons from the Pandemic: 8x8 Global Speaker Series (3/3) with Yara Paoli, Adam Najberg, and Shamik Talukder</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>SOSV, Chinaccelerator</itunes:author>
      <itunes:duration>00:31:28</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>Today we’re bringing you the final episode of our Chinaccelerator 8x8 Global Speakers Series where we invite some of the most accomplished members of the global startup ecosystem to share key lessons for startups in eight minutes or less. </itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>Today we’re bringing you the final episode of our Chinaccelerator 8x8 Global Speakers Series where we invite some of the most accomplished members of the global startup ecosystem to share key lessons for startups in eight minutes or less. </itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>growth, skyscanner, marketing, alibaba, influencer marketing, startup ecosystem, dji, pr, china, storytelling, public relations, chinaccelerator, sosv, startup, venture capital, content, martech, viacom 18, growth mindset, radio mirchi</itunes:keywords>
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      <title>The Making of Airbnb’s China Dream with Sean Pan, Former Head of China Operations at Airbnb</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>Airbnb, undeniably the world’s most popular vacation rental online marketplace, just went public recently. In just days, Airbnb’s valuation has exceeded $100 billion and now eclipses even some of the world’s largest hotel chains such as Marriott, Hilton, and Hyatt.</p><p>This episode is a blast from the past, where we revisit our conversation with Sean Pan, the former Head of China Operations at Airbnb, who had overseen the transformation of Airbnb’s strategy, management system, and branding in China since 2015 when the company only had 6 employees!</p><p>Today, China has become one of the most important markets for Airbnb where the company is seeing exponential growth. Airbnb, or Aibiying, as it is better known in China managed to not only survive in the China market but also growing from strengths to strengths, something that most international startups have failed to do when they enter China.</p><p>In this episode, Sean mentions one of the key obstacles confronted by many foreign companies who want to localize in China is the communication problem between the global and China team. How did Airbnb manage to successfully tackle this issue? What efforts does the company put in to build internal trust?</p><p><strong>Show Notes:</strong><br />[01:26] Introduction to Sean<br />[05:33] The Philosophy behind Airbnb’s office in Beijing<br />[06:30] Building and maintaining Airbnb’s unique Culture in China<br />[08:09] How to foster a commitment to China from the global Team?<br />[12:00] Key finding for Airbnb’s success<br />[15:38] Managing the relation with head-quarters<br />[16:12] Evolution of Airbnb’s China strategy<br />[18:03] Creating a China-specific brand<br />[22:38] Challenge foreign entrepreneurs are facing in China<br />[26:00] Is there an opportunity for foreign companies in China?</p><p>Many thanks to our guest Benjamin Qiu; host <strong>Oscar Ramos</strong>; producers  <strong>Eva Shi</strong> and  <strong>Sagar Chaudhary</strong>; editor <strong>David</strong>; organizer <strong>Chinaccelerator</strong>; and sponsor<strong> People Squared</strong>. Be sure to check out our website <a href="https://chinaccelerator.com/"><strong>www.chinaccelerator.com</strong></a></p><p>Share, subscribe, review, enjoy!</p><p>Follow us on LinkedIn:  <a href="https://chinastartuppulse.simplecast.com/episodes/www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/"><strong>www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/</strong></a></p><p>Email us: <a href="mailto:team@chinastartuppulse.com"><strong>team@chinastartuppulse.com</strong></a></p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Sun, 20 Dec 2020 02:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Chinaccelerator, SOSV)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Airbnb, undeniably the world’s most popular vacation rental online marketplace, just went public recently. In just days, Airbnb’s valuation has exceeded $100 billion and now eclipses even some of the world’s largest hotel chains such as Marriott, Hilton, and Hyatt.</p><p>This episode is a blast from the past, where we revisit our conversation with Sean Pan, the former Head of China Operations at Airbnb, who had overseen the transformation of Airbnb’s strategy, management system, and branding in China since 2015 when the company only had 6 employees!</p><p>Today, China has become one of the most important markets for Airbnb where the company is seeing exponential growth. Airbnb, or Aibiying, as it is better known in China managed to not only survive in the China market but also growing from strengths to strengths, something that most international startups have failed to do when they enter China.</p><p>In this episode, Sean mentions one of the key obstacles confronted by many foreign companies who want to localize in China is the communication problem between the global and China team. How did Airbnb manage to successfully tackle this issue? What efforts does the company put in to build internal trust?</p><p><strong>Show Notes:</strong><br />[01:26] Introduction to Sean<br />[05:33] The Philosophy behind Airbnb’s office in Beijing<br />[06:30] Building and maintaining Airbnb’s unique Culture in China<br />[08:09] How to foster a commitment to China from the global Team?<br />[12:00] Key finding for Airbnb’s success<br />[15:38] Managing the relation with head-quarters<br />[16:12] Evolution of Airbnb’s China strategy<br />[18:03] Creating a China-specific brand<br />[22:38] Challenge foreign entrepreneurs are facing in China<br />[26:00] Is there an opportunity for foreign companies in China?</p><p>Many thanks to our guest Benjamin Qiu; host <strong>Oscar Ramos</strong>; producers  <strong>Eva Shi</strong> and  <strong>Sagar Chaudhary</strong>; editor <strong>David</strong>; organizer <strong>Chinaccelerator</strong>; and sponsor<strong> People Squared</strong>. Be sure to check out our website <a href="https://chinaccelerator.com/"><strong>www.chinaccelerator.com</strong></a></p><p>Share, subscribe, review, enjoy!</p><p>Follow us on LinkedIn:  <a href="https://chinastartuppulse.simplecast.com/episodes/www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/"><strong>www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/</strong></a></p><p>Email us: <a href="mailto:team@chinastartuppulse.com"><strong>team@chinastartuppulse.com</strong></a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>The Making of Airbnb’s China Dream with Sean Pan, Former Head of China Operations at Airbnb</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Chinaccelerator, SOSV</itunes:author>
      <itunes:duration>00:30:27</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>Airbnb, undeniably the world’s most popular vacation rental online marketplace, just went public recently. In just days, Airbnb’s valuation has exceeded $100 billion and now eclipses even some of the world’s largest hotel chains such as Marriott, Hilton, and Hyatt.

This episode is a blast from the past, where we revisit our conversation with Sean Pan, the former Head of China Operations at Airbnb, who had overseen the transformation of Airbnb’s strategy, management system, and branding in China since 2015 when the company only had 6 employees!

Today, China has become one of the most important markets for Airbnb where the company is seeing exponential growth. Airbnb, or Aibiying, as it is better known in China managed to not only survive in the China market but also growing from strengths to strengths, something that most international startups have failed to do when they enter China.

In this episode, Sean mentions one of the key obstacles confronted by many foreign companies who want to localize in China is the communication problem between the global and China team. How did Airbnb manage to successfully tackle this issue? What efforts does the company put in to build internal trust?</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>Airbnb, undeniably the world’s most popular vacation rental online marketplace, just went public recently. In just days, Airbnb’s valuation has exceeded $100 billion and now eclipses even some of the world’s largest hotel chains such as Marriott, Hilton, and Hyatt.

This episode is a blast from the past, where we revisit our conversation with Sean Pan, the former Head of China Operations at Airbnb, who had overseen the transformation of Airbnb’s strategy, management system, and branding in China since 2015 when the company only had 6 employees!

Today, China has become one of the most important markets for Airbnb where the company is seeing exponential growth. Airbnb, or Aibiying, as it is better known in China managed to not only survive in the China market but also growing from strengths to strengths, something that most international startups have failed to do when they enter China.

In this episode, Sean mentions one of the key obstacles confronted by many foreign companies who want to localize in China is the communication problem between the global and China team. How did Airbnb manage to successfully tackle this issue? What efforts does the company put in to build internal trust?</itunes:subtitle>
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      <title>Lessons to Avoid Failure in M&amp;As &amp; Marriages; and Framework to Invest in Lifestyle Startups: 8x8 Global Speaker Series (1/3) with Shannon Kalayanamitr and Per Welinder</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>Welcome everybody to another episode of the China Startup Pulse. We have a special one today. We are back with our Chinaccelerator 8x8 Global Speaker Series with eight influential speakers from all over the world to share their insights for startups in eight minutes.</p><p>In today’s episode, we bring not one but two incredible investors to share their insights in building and investing in global businesses, bringing different perspectives drawn from their own careers.  Stay tuned for insights from Shannon Kalayanamitr and Per Welinder.</p><p><strong>Show Notes:</strong></p><p><strong>02:30: Shannon Kalayanamitr</strong></p><p><strong>12:05: Per Welinder</strong></p><p>Our first guest is Shannon Kalayanamitr, Partner at Gobi Partners. She has made her mark in the tech world building businesses such as Orami/ MOXY, Lazada, and PPTVThailand] and driving the ecosystem through tech investments as CEO of the IKIGAI GROUP and 5GCatalyst Technologies, in Southeast Asia.</p><p>In today’s talk, Shannon brings a very unique approach to viewing M&As and marriages. Like marriage, M&A is a long-term commitment. And like marriage, M&A also requires a lot of work in order to be successful. Shannon gives some interesting insights that are applicable to both marriages and M&As.</p><p>Our second speaker is the legendary skateboarder Per Welinder, who many people may know from the movie, Back to the Future. Per is an entrepreneur and venture capitalist focusing on culture, lifestyle, and consumer technologies. He has co-founded influential skateboard and lifestyle brands including Birdhouse, Flip, Baker, etc.</p><p>In today’s talk, Per shares his story of how he transitioned his career from being a professional skateboarder, starting his own skateboard company, to becoming a venture capitalist and investing in lifestyle companies and the lessons he learned along the way. He is sure to entice the audience with his entrepreneurial insights as he has done with his skills on the skateboard.</p><p> </p><p>Many thanks to our guest Benjamin Qiu; host <strong>Oscar Ramos</strong>; producers  <strong>Eva Shi</strong> and  <strong>Sagar Chaudhary</strong>; editor <strong>David</strong>; organizer <strong>Chinaccelerator</strong>; and sponsor<strong> People Squared</strong>. Be sure to check out our website <a href="https://chinaccelerator.com/"><strong>www.chinaccelerator.com</strong></a></p><p>Share, subscribe, review, enjoy!</p><p>Follow us on LinkedIn:  <a href="https://chinastartuppulse.simplecast.com/episodes/www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/"><strong>www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/</strong></a></p><p>Email us: <a href="mailto:team@chinastartuppulse.com"><strong>team@chinastartuppulse.com</strong></a></p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Tue, 8 Dec 2020 01:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (SOSV, Oscar Ramos, Chinaccelerator, Per Welinder, Shannon Kalayanamitr)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Welcome everybody to another episode of the China Startup Pulse. We have a special one today. We are back with our Chinaccelerator 8x8 Global Speaker Series with eight influential speakers from all over the world to share their insights for startups in eight minutes.</p><p>In today’s episode, we bring not one but two incredible investors to share their insights in building and investing in global businesses, bringing different perspectives drawn from their own careers.  Stay tuned for insights from Shannon Kalayanamitr and Per Welinder.</p><p><strong>Show Notes:</strong></p><p><strong>02:30: Shannon Kalayanamitr</strong></p><p><strong>12:05: Per Welinder</strong></p><p>Our first guest is Shannon Kalayanamitr, Partner at Gobi Partners. She has made her mark in the tech world building businesses such as Orami/ MOXY, Lazada, and PPTVThailand] and driving the ecosystem through tech investments as CEO of the IKIGAI GROUP and 5GCatalyst Technologies, in Southeast Asia.</p><p>In today’s talk, Shannon brings a very unique approach to viewing M&As and marriages. Like marriage, M&A is a long-term commitment. And like marriage, M&A also requires a lot of work in order to be successful. Shannon gives some interesting insights that are applicable to both marriages and M&As.</p><p>Our second speaker is the legendary skateboarder Per Welinder, who many people may know from the movie, Back to the Future. Per is an entrepreneur and venture capitalist focusing on culture, lifestyle, and consumer technologies. He has co-founded influential skateboard and lifestyle brands including Birdhouse, Flip, Baker, etc.</p><p>In today’s talk, Per shares his story of how he transitioned his career from being a professional skateboarder, starting his own skateboard company, to becoming a venture capitalist and investing in lifestyle companies and the lessons he learned along the way. He is sure to entice the audience with his entrepreneurial insights as he has done with his skills on the skateboard.</p><p> </p><p>Many thanks to our guest Benjamin Qiu; host <strong>Oscar Ramos</strong>; producers  <strong>Eva Shi</strong> and  <strong>Sagar Chaudhary</strong>; editor <strong>David</strong>; organizer <strong>Chinaccelerator</strong>; and sponsor<strong> People Squared</strong>. Be sure to check out our website <a href="https://chinaccelerator.com/"><strong>www.chinaccelerator.com</strong></a></p><p>Share, subscribe, review, enjoy!</p><p>Follow us on LinkedIn:  <a href="https://chinastartuppulse.simplecast.com/episodes/www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/"><strong>www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/</strong></a></p><p>Email us: <a href="mailto:team@chinastartuppulse.com"><strong>team@chinastartuppulse.com</strong></a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>Lessons to Avoid Failure in M&amp;As &amp; Marriages; and Framework to Invest in Lifestyle Startups: 8x8 Global Speaker Series (1/3) with Shannon Kalayanamitr and Per Welinder</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>SOSV, Oscar Ramos, Chinaccelerator, Per Welinder, Shannon Kalayanamitr</itunes:author>
      <itunes:duration>00:19:48</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>Welcome everybody to another episode of the China Startup Pulse. We have a special one today. We are back with our Chinaccelerator 8x8 Global Speaker Series with eight influential speakers from all over the world to share their insights for startups in eight minutes. 

In today’s episode, we bring not one but two incredible investors to share their insights in building and investing in global businesses, bringing different perspectives drawn from their own careers.  Stay tuned for insights from Shannon Kalayanamitr and Per Welinder.</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>Welcome everybody to another episode of the China Startup Pulse. We have a special one today. We are back with our Chinaccelerator 8x8 Global Speaker Series with eight influential speakers from all over the world to share their insights for startups in eight minutes. 

In today’s episode, we bring not one but two incredible investors to share their insights in building and investing in global businesses, bringing different perspectives drawn from their own careers.  Stay tuned for insights from Shannon Kalayanamitr and Per Welinder.</itunes:subtitle>
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      <title>Open Innovation in Healthcare from Academia to Corporates to Startups: She Loves Tech Series with Dr. Yongqin Zeng, Senior Director Innovation Lead at Philips Venture</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p><strong>Dr. Yongqin Zeng a Senior Director & Innovation Lead in Philips Venture</strong>. Her long and rich career has seen her do over a decade of research in academia before joining the private sector where she has done it all. She led multiple research departments in different industries, drove several venture projects that led to the creation of two new business units, and also facilitated over 10 Open Innovation projects involving universities, hospitals, and of course startups.  Dr. Zeng’s work on Open Innovation is also featured in the book “Innovation in China” published by MIT in 2016.</p><p>In this episode, Dr. Zeng helps us dive deeper into innovation and R&D from the perspectives of academia, corporations, and startups. </p><p><strong>Show Notes</strong></p><p><strong>2:24</strong> Introduction to Dr. Yongqin Zeng</p><p><strong>3:18</strong> Moving from research in academia to research in the corporate world</p><p><strong>4:30</strong> Difference between R&D and Innovation.</p><p><strong>7:00</strong> Do all inventions drive innovation?</p><p><strong>11:27</strong> How monetization shapes the R&D pipeline for corporates.</p><p><strong>18:28</strong> Deep dive into healthcare startup ecosystem: The competitive advantage they possess to deliver results</p><p><strong>20:51</strong> Synergies between healthcare startups and hospitals: China trend vs Global trend</p><p><strong>23:00</strong> Strength of Open Innovation in healthcare ecosystem outside China</p><p><strong>24:55</strong> Models that will shape the future of open innovation</p><p><strong>28:16</strong> Open innovation models improving UI and UX in the healthcare industry</p><p><strong>32:35</strong> Getting in touch with Dr. Yongqin Zeng</p><p> </p><p>Many thanks to our guest Benjamin Qiu; host <strong>Oscar Ramos</strong>; producers  <strong>Eva Shi</strong> and  <strong>Sagar Chaudhary</strong>; editor <strong>David</strong>; organizer <strong>Chinaccelerator</strong>; and sponsor<strong> People Squared</strong>. Be sure to check out our website <a href="https://chinaccelerator.com/"><strong>www.chinaccelerator.com</strong></a></p><p>Share, subscribe, review, enjoy!</p><p>Follow us on LinkedIn:  <a href="https://chinastartuppulse.simplecast.com/episodes/www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/"><strong>www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/</strong></a></p><p>Email us: <a href="mailto:team@chinastartuppulse.com"><strong>team@chinastartuppulse.com</strong></a></p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Sat, 28 Nov 2020 01:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Chinaccelerator, SOSV)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong>Dr. Yongqin Zeng a Senior Director & Innovation Lead in Philips Venture</strong>. Her long and rich career has seen her do over a decade of research in academia before joining the private sector where she has done it all. She led multiple research departments in different industries, drove several venture projects that led to the creation of two new business units, and also facilitated over 10 Open Innovation projects involving universities, hospitals, and of course startups.  Dr. Zeng’s work on Open Innovation is also featured in the book “Innovation in China” published by MIT in 2016.</p><p>In this episode, Dr. Zeng helps us dive deeper into innovation and R&D from the perspectives of academia, corporations, and startups. </p><p><strong>Show Notes</strong></p><p><strong>2:24</strong> Introduction to Dr. Yongqin Zeng</p><p><strong>3:18</strong> Moving from research in academia to research in the corporate world</p><p><strong>4:30</strong> Difference between R&D and Innovation.</p><p><strong>7:00</strong> Do all inventions drive innovation?</p><p><strong>11:27</strong> How monetization shapes the R&D pipeline for corporates.</p><p><strong>18:28</strong> Deep dive into healthcare startup ecosystem: The competitive advantage they possess to deliver results</p><p><strong>20:51</strong> Synergies between healthcare startups and hospitals: China trend vs Global trend</p><p><strong>23:00</strong> Strength of Open Innovation in healthcare ecosystem outside China</p><p><strong>24:55</strong> Models that will shape the future of open innovation</p><p><strong>28:16</strong> Open innovation models improving UI and UX in the healthcare industry</p><p><strong>32:35</strong> Getting in touch with Dr. Yongqin Zeng</p><p> </p><p>Many thanks to our guest Benjamin Qiu; host <strong>Oscar Ramos</strong>; producers  <strong>Eva Shi</strong> and  <strong>Sagar Chaudhary</strong>; editor <strong>David</strong>; organizer <strong>Chinaccelerator</strong>; and sponsor<strong> People Squared</strong>. Be sure to check out our website <a href="https://chinaccelerator.com/"><strong>www.chinaccelerator.com</strong></a></p><p>Share, subscribe, review, enjoy!</p><p>Follow us on LinkedIn:  <a href="https://chinastartuppulse.simplecast.com/episodes/www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/"><strong>www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/</strong></a></p><p>Email us: <a href="mailto:team@chinastartuppulse.com"><strong>team@chinastartuppulse.com</strong></a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>Open Innovation in Healthcare from Academia to Corporates to Startups: She Loves Tech Series with Dr. Yongqin Zeng, Senior Director Innovation Lead at Philips Venture</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Chinaccelerator, SOSV</itunes:author>
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      <itunes:duration>00:34:19</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>Today, we have a very special episode we are bringing to you, together with She Loves Tech. 

She Loves Tech is the world’s largest startup competition for women and technology. During the last 6 years, they have created the environment necessary for female lead startups to thrive. Championing the best entrepreneurs through education and mentorship, to solve the funding gap for women. 

R&amp;D and innovation are terms very often used interchangeably, especially in the business world. But how do these differ from each other? Do all inventions drive innovation? Does all the innovation require a new invention? And what is the role that startups play in the space?

We have the perfect guest to answer these questions and more. Dr. Yongqin Zeng a Senior Director &amp; Innovation Lead in Philips Venture. Her long and rich career has seen her do over a decade of research in academia before joining the private sector where she has done it all. She led multiple research departments in different industries, drove several venture projects that led to the creation of two new business units, and also facilitated over 10 Open Innovation projects involving universities, hospitals, and of course startups.  Dr. Zeng’s work on Open Innovation is also featured in the book “Innovation in China” published by MIT in 2016. 

In this episode, Dr. Zeng helps us dive deeper into innovation and R&amp;D from the perspectives of academia, corporations, and startups. 

</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>Today, we have a very special episode we are bringing to you, together with She Loves Tech. 

She Loves Tech is the world’s largest startup competition for women and technology. During the last 6 years, they have created the environment necessary for female lead startups to thrive. Championing the best entrepreneurs through education and mentorship, to solve the funding gap for women. 

R&amp;D and innovation are terms very often used interchangeably, especially in the business world. But how do these differ from each other? Do all inventions drive innovation? Does all the innovation require a new invention? And what is the role that startups play in the space?

We have the perfect guest to answer these questions and more. Dr. Yongqin Zeng a Senior Director &amp; Innovation Lead in Philips Venture. Her long and rich career has seen her do over a decade of research in academia before joining the private sector where she has done it all. She led multiple research departments in different industries, drove several venture projects that led to the creation of two new business units, and also facilitated over 10 Open Innovation projects involving universities, hospitals, and of course startups.  Dr. Zeng’s work on Open Innovation is also featured in the book “Innovation in China” published by MIT in 2016. 

In this episode, Dr. Zeng helps us dive deeper into innovation and R&amp;D from the perspectives of academia, corporations, and startups. 

</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>accelerator, corporate, startup ecosystem, vc, china, healthcare, europe, research, venture capital, innovation, open innovation, startups, healthcare startups, r&amp;d</itunes:keywords>
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      <itunes:episode>149</itunes:episode>
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      <title>Rapid Accession of China’s Capital Market Post COVID with Benjamin Qiu, Legal Expert on Cross-border Investment</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>Today, we will invite one of our old friends Benjamin Qiu, Partner of Loeb & Loeb, an international law firm based in the US and Asia. He has over 15-year experience in working with high growth companies in China and big VC firms such as GGV and Sequoia Capital. He is the perfect person to answer our questions and expand on the future outlook of the post-covid startup world. We will also talk about the relationship between China and other Asian markets including Southeast Asia and India, and how the recent events will change the way that China invests in those regions.</p><p><strong>Show Notes:</strong></p><p>02:01 Introduce Benjamin Qiu</p><p>02:41 More Chinese tech companies got listed in overseas markets</p><p>05:02 China’s financial policy reforms</p><p>08:42 How the pandemic has impacted investors’ investment deals</p><p>12:54 Reasons behind the fast market recovery in China</p><p>16:05 Trends about China going to Southeast Asia</p><p>20:43 The impact created by the geopolitical intensions between China and India</p><p> </p><p>Many thanks to our guest Benjamin Qiu; host <strong>Oscar Ramos</strong>; producers  <strong>Eva Shi</strong> and  <strong>Sagar Chaudhary</strong>; editor <strong>David</strong>; organizer <strong>Chinaccelerator</strong>; and sponsor<strong> People Squared</strong>. Be sure to check out our website <a href="https://chinaccelerator.com/"><strong>www.chinaccelerator.com</strong></a></p><p>Share, subscribe, review, enjoy!</p><p>Follow us on LinkedIn:  <a href="https://chinastartuppulse.simplecast.com/episodes/www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/"><strong>www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/</strong></a></p><p>Email us: <a href="mailto:team@chinastartuppulse.com"><strong>team@chinastartuppulse.com</strong></a></p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Mon, 16 Nov 2020 11:29:33 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Chinaccelerator, SOSV)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Today, we will invite one of our old friends Benjamin Qiu, Partner of Loeb & Loeb, an international law firm based in the US and Asia. He has over 15-year experience in working with high growth companies in China and big VC firms such as GGV and Sequoia Capital. He is the perfect person to answer our questions and expand on the future outlook of the post-covid startup world. We will also talk about the relationship between China and other Asian markets including Southeast Asia and India, and how the recent events will change the way that China invests in those regions.</p><p><strong>Show Notes:</strong></p><p>02:01 Introduce Benjamin Qiu</p><p>02:41 More Chinese tech companies got listed in overseas markets</p><p>05:02 China’s financial policy reforms</p><p>08:42 How the pandemic has impacted investors’ investment deals</p><p>12:54 Reasons behind the fast market recovery in China</p><p>16:05 Trends about China going to Southeast Asia</p><p>20:43 The impact created by the geopolitical intensions between China and India</p><p> </p><p>Many thanks to our guest Benjamin Qiu; host <strong>Oscar Ramos</strong>; producers  <strong>Eva Shi</strong> and  <strong>Sagar Chaudhary</strong>; editor <strong>David</strong>; organizer <strong>Chinaccelerator</strong>; and sponsor<strong> People Squared</strong>. Be sure to check out our website <a href="https://chinaccelerator.com/"><strong>www.chinaccelerator.com</strong></a></p><p>Share, subscribe, review, enjoy!</p><p>Follow us on LinkedIn:  <a href="https://chinastartuppulse.simplecast.com/episodes/www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/"><strong>www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/</strong></a></p><p>Email us: <a href="mailto:team@chinastartuppulse.com"><strong>team@chinastartuppulse.com</strong></a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>Rapid Accession of China’s Capital Market Post COVID with Benjamin Qiu, Legal Expert on Cross-border Investment</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Chinaccelerator, SOSV</itunes:author>
      <itunes:image href="https://image.simplecastcdn.com/images/f0ec2b13-bb5e-4311-b84c-7ccfee9698de/9047115b-02bb-4969-9dc5-2f6bda24a17e/3000x3000/benjamin-qiu.jpg?aid=rss_feed"/>
      <itunes:duration>00:25:59</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>The pandemic has changed the way how we meet, do business and plan for the future, but has it slowed down the pace of Chinese technology companies going public in overseas markets? Absolutely not! Chinese companies are coming out as winners, as now they are looking into overseas markets to secure more financing.

In today’s episode, we asked the hard questions. How has the pandemic impacted on global financial markets? What has changed in 2020 when it comes to Chinese technology companies and the relationship between China and other markets? And what do these changes mean from a policy and legal perspective?

Today, we will invite one of our old friends Benjamin Qiu, Partner of Loeb &amp; Loeb, an international law firm based in the US and Asia. He has over 15-year experience in working with high growth companies in China and big VC firms such as GGV and Sequoia Capital. He is the perfect person to answer our questions and expand on the future outlook of the post-covid startup world. We will also talk about the relationship between China and other Asian markets including Southeast Asia and India, and how the recent events will change the way that China invests in those regions.</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>The pandemic has changed the way how we meet, do business and plan for the future, but has it slowed down the pace of Chinese technology companies going public in overseas markets? Absolutely not! Chinese companies are coming out as winners, as now they are looking into overseas markets to secure more financing.

In today’s episode, we asked the hard questions. How has the pandemic impacted on global financial markets? What has changed in 2020 when it comes to Chinese technology companies and the relationship between China and other markets? And what do these changes mean from a policy and legal perspective?

Today, we will invite one of our old friends Benjamin Qiu, Partner of Loeb &amp; Loeb, an international law firm based in the US and Asia. He has over 15-year experience in working with high growth companies in China and big VC firms such as GGV and Sequoia Capital. He is the perfect person to answer our questions and expand on the future outlook of the post-covid startup world. We will also talk about the relationship between China and other Asian markets including Southeast Asia and India, and how the recent events will change the way that China invests in those regions.</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>accelerator, capital market, vc, pandemic, china, policy, southeast asia, china tech, chinaccelerator, legal, india, sosv, startup, venture capital, ipo, innovation, early-stage startups, financial reforms, covid, investment, financial market</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
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      <itunes:episode>148</itunes:episode>
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      <title>Inside the VC Mind Ep2: Billion-dollar Opportunities That Investors Missed (Remington Ong, Ray Yang, William Bao Bean)</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>Our guests:</p><p><strong>Remington Ong</strong><br />Remington is Partner at Fenbushi Capital, one of the earliest and most active blockchain-focused venture capital firms, where he has managed investments into over 40 leading startups around the world leveraging blockchain technology to disrupt a wide range of industries, such as finance, healthcare, supply chain, and consumer goods.</p><p><strong>Ray Yang</strong></p><p>Ray is Partner at Marathon Venture Partners, a China-based early to growth stage fund focusing on digital healthcare transformation. Prior to Marathon Venture Partners, Ray was MD at Northern Light Venture Capital and Investment Director at Orchid Asia Group Management. Many of his investments have achieved listings on major stock exchanges or achieved exit via M&A, such as Burning Rock Riotech, a Chinese biotech company  went public on NASDAQ.</p><p><strong>William Bao Bean</strong></p><p>William is General Partner at SOSV. a US$740m+ venture capital fund known as “the accelerator VC”. He is also the MD at Chinaccelerator, SOSV’s global Internet accelerator and the first accelerator to launch in China in 2010 and MOX, the mobile-only accelerator platform with 130m smartphone users in SE Asia. Before SOSV, William was one of the founding MDs at SingTel Innov8 Ventures and Partner at Softbank China & India Holdings.</p><p><strong>Show Notes:</strong></p><p>01:00 Talk with Remington Ong</p><p>06:41 Talk with Ray Yang</p><p>14:00 Talk with William Bao Bean<br /> </p><p>Many thanks to our guests; host <strong>Oscar Ramos</strong>; producers  <strong>Eva Shi</strong> and  <strong>Sagar Chaudhary</strong>; editor <strong>David</strong>; organizer <strong>Chinaccelerator</strong>; and sponsor<strong> People Squared</strong>. Be sure to check out our website <a href="https://chinaccelerator.com/"><strong>www.chinaccelerator.com</strong></a></p><p>Share, subscribe, review, enjoy!</p><p>Follow us on LinkedIn:  <a href="https://chinastartuppulse.simplecast.com/episodes/www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/"><strong>www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/</strong></a></p><p>Email us: <a href="mailto:team@chinastartuppulse.com"><strong>team@chinastartuppulse.com</strong></a></p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Mon, 2 Nov 2020 10:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Chinaccelerator, SOSV)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Our guests:</p><p><strong>Remington Ong</strong><br />Remington is Partner at Fenbushi Capital, one of the earliest and most active blockchain-focused venture capital firms, where he has managed investments into over 40 leading startups around the world leveraging blockchain technology to disrupt a wide range of industries, such as finance, healthcare, supply chain, and consumer goods.</p><p><strong>Ray Yang</strong></p><p>Ray is Partner at Marathon Venture Partners, a China-based early to growth stage fund focusing on digital healthcare transformation. Prior to Marathon Venture Partners, Ray was MD at Northern Light Venture Capital and Investment Director at Orchid Asia Group Management. Many of his investments have achieved listings on major stock exchanges or achieved exit via M&A, such as Burning Rock Riotech, a Chinese biotech company  went public on NASDAQ.</p><p><strong>William Bao Bean</strong></p><p>William is General Partner at SOSV. a US$740m+ venture capital fund known as “the accelerator VC”. He is also the MD at Chinaccelerator, SOSV’s global Internet accelerator and the first accelerator to launch in China in 2010 and MOX, the mobile-only accelerator platform with 130m smartphone users in SE Asia. Before SOSV, William was one of the founding MDs at SingTel Innov8 Ventures and Partner at Softbank China & India Holdings.</p><p><strong>Show Notes:</strong></p><p>01:00 Talk with Remington Ong</p><p>06:41 Talk with Ray Yang</p><p>14:00 Talk with William Bao Bean<br /> </p><p>Many thanks to our guests; host <strong>Oscar Ramos</strong>; producers  <strong>Eva Shi</strong> and  <strong>Sagar Chaudhary</strong>; editor <strong>David</strong>; organizer <strong>Chinaccelerator</strong>; and sponsor<strong> People Squared</strong>. Be sure to check out our website <a href="https://chinaccelerator.com/"><strong>www.chinaccelerator.com</strong></a></p><p>Share, subscribe, review, enjoy!</p><p>Follow us on LinkedIn:  <a href="https://chinastartuppulse.simplecast.com/episodes/www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/"><strong>www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/</strong></a></p><p>Email us: <a href="mailto:team@chinastartuppulse.com"><strong>team@chinastartuppulse.com</strong></a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>Inside the VC Mind Ep2: Billion-dollar Opportunities That Investors Missed (Remington Ong, Ray Yang, William Bao Bean)</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Chinaccelerator, SOSV</itunes:author>
      <itunes:image href="https://image.simplecastcdn.com/images/f0ec2b13-bb5e-4311-b84c-7ccfee9698de/737dcecd-6349-4bfe-bdae-1baa81e29dfe/3000x3000/podcast-logo1.jpg?aid=rss_feed"/>
      <itunes:duration>00:21:34</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>Welcome to the second episode of our new series “Inside the VC Mind” where we bring you the professionals from the venture capital world, who will deliver their observations, thoughts, and opinions.

Today we are going to talk about those startups that investors missed but would have loved to invest in, with Remington Ong, Partner at Fenbushi Capital, Ray Yang, Partner at Marathon Venture Partners, and William Bao Bean, General Partner at SOSV and Managing Director at Chinaccelerator and MOX.</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>Welcome to the second episode of our new series “Inside the VC Mind” where we bring you the professionals from the venture capital world, who will deliver their observations, thoughts, and opinions.

Today we are going to talk about those startups that investors missed but would have loved to invest in, with Remington Ong, Partner at Fenbushi Capital, Ray Yang, Partner at Marathon Venture Partners, and William Bao Bean, General Partner at SOSV and Managing Director at Chinaccelerator and MOX.</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>accelerator, investor, vc, healthcare, marathon venture partners, chinaccelerator, softbank, sosv, venture capital, mox, mobile only, blockchain, early stage investment, fenbushi capital, mobile first, m&amp;a, investment, invest</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:episode>147</itunes:episode>
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      <title>China&apos;s Cross-Border Luxury Ecommerce: The Past &amp; The Present, with Claire Chung, Former China GM of Yoox Net-A-Porter Group</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>Show notes:</p><p>02:26 Educating overseas brands about the China market in Shangpin</p><p>05:03 The reasons why overseas brands rejected Chinese platforms in early days</p><p>08:05 Shangpin partnered with banks to build trust with customers</p><p>10:30 First time brought Topshop to China’s online space</p><p>13:22 Online consumers for high-end brands in China</p><p>16:37 The role of Shangpin in providing unique user experience</p><p>19:17 The importance of after-sales customer service</p><p>22:04 The biggest changes in China’s luxury ecommerce space</p><p>28:32 China’s innovation that is brought to the rest of the world</p><p>30:53 How the overseas perceives the innovation from China</p><p>35:00 The new definition of luxury<br /> </p><p>Many thanks to our guest <strong> Claire Chung</strong>; host <strong>Oscar Ramos</strong>; producers <strong>Eva Shi</strong> and <strong>Sagar Chaudhary</strong>; editor <strong>David</strong>; organizer <strong>Chinaccelerator</strong>; and sponsor<strong> People Squared</strong>. Be sure to check out our website <a href="https://chinaccelerator.com/"><strong>www.chinaccelerator.com</strong></a></p><p>Share, subscribe, review, enjoy!</p><p>Follow us on LinkedIn:  <a href="https://chinastartuppulse.simplecast.com/episodes/www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/" target="_blank"><strong>www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/</strong></a></p><p>Email us: <a href="mailto:team@chinastartuppulse.com" target="_blank"><strong>team@chinastartuppulse.com</strong></a></p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Fri, 23 Oct 2020 02:17:41 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Chinaccelerator, SOSV)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Show notes:</p><p>02:26 Educating overseas brands about the China market in Shangpin</p><p>05:03 The reasons why overseas brands rejected Chinese platforms in early days</p><p>08:05 Shangpin partnered with banks to build trust with customers</p><p>10:30 First time brought Topshop to China’s online space</p><p>13:22 Online consumers for high-end brands in China</p><p>16:37 The role of Shangpin in providing unique user experience</p><p>19:17 The importance of after-sales customer service</p><p>22:04 The biggest changes in China’s luxury ecommerce space</p><p>28:32 China’s innovation that is brought to the rest of the world</p><p>30:53 How the overseas perceives the innovation from China</p><p>35:00 The new definition of luxury<br /> </p><p>Many thanks to our guest <strong> Claire Chung</strong>; host <strong>Oscar Ramos</strong>; producers <strong>Eva Shi</strong> and <strong>Sagar Chaudhary</strong>; editor <strong>David</strong>; organizer <strong>Chinaccelerator</strong>; and sponsor<strong> People Squared</strong>. Be sure to check out our website <a href="https://chinaccelerator.com/"><strong>www.chinaccelerator.com</strong></a></p><p>Share, subscribe, review, enjoy!</p><p>Follow us on LinkedIn:  <a href="https://chinastartuppulse.simplecast.com/episodes/www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/" target="_blank"><strong>www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/</strong></a></p><p>Email us: <a href="mailto:team@chinastartuppulse.com" target="_blank"><strong>team@chinastartuppulse.com</strong></a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>China&apos;s Cross-Border Luxury Ecommerce: The Past &amp; The Present, with Claire Chung, Former China GM of Yoox Net-A-Porter Group</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Chinaccelerator, SOSV</itunes:author>
      <itunes:duration>00:41:22</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>Driven by the rise of China&apos;s middle and high-income classes and their crazy pursuit of better products, China is regarded as the engine of the global luxury industry. Brands from all over the world are rushing to enter the market and reach Chinese customers in different ways.

E-commerce is something that brands cannot ignore. They have to accelerate the adoption if they want to have a say in this market.

Today, we want to look back at the era when China&apos;s luxury e-commerce was just emerging. How did vertical e-commerce platforms bring overseas fashion and high-end brands to Chinese consumers? How did they open up a new business battlefield, and how many innovative experiments did they run to do so? 

After that, we are going to have some hands-on insights to learn what has changed in this industry. Brand attitude? Consumers? Channels? Formats? For example, the rise of e-commerce livestream?

We are honored to invite Claire Chung, former China General Manager of Yoox Net-A-Porter Group, former vice president of global business development of Shangpin to join us and talk about luxury e-commerce over the past decade.
</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>Driven by the rise of China&apos;s middle and high-income classes and their crazy pursuit of better products, China is regarded as the engine of the global luxury industry. Brands from all over the world are rushing to enter the market and reach Chinese customers in different ways.

E-commerce is something that brands cannot ignore. They have to accelerate the adoption if they want to have a say in this market.

Today, we want to look back at the era when China&apos;s luxury e-commerce was just emerging. How did vertical e-commerce platforms bring overseas fashion and high-end brands to Chinese consumers? How did they open up a new business battlefield, and how many innovative experiments did they run to do so? 

After that, we are going to have some hands-on insights to learn what has changed in this industry. Brand attitude? Consumers? Channels? Formats? For example, the rise of e-commerce livestream?

We are honored to invite Claire Chung, former China General Manager of Yoox Net-A-Porter Group, former vice president of global business development of Shangpin to join us and talk about luxury e-commerce over the past decade.
</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>accelerator, high-end product, yoox net-a-porter, vc, luxury ecommerce, luxury brands, china, chinaccelerator, sosv, luxury goods, venture capital, vertical ecommerce, shangpin, china ecommerce, china innovation, ecommerce livestream, fashion brands, ecommerce</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:episode>146</itunes:episode>
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      <title>Inside the VC Mind Ep1: The Top Mistake that Founders Make During Fundraising (Helen Wong, Gary Yang, Jeff Chi)</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p><strong>Our guests:</strong></p><p><strong>Helen Wong</strong></p><p>Helen is Partner at Qiming Venture Partners and a founding team member at GGV Capital. Qiming is an early to growth stage venture capital firm, which currently manages four USD funds and three RMB funds with over $1.7 billion in assets.</p><p>Helen’s successful exits at Qiming include Mobike (sold to Meituan), Luojiswei (unicorn valuation, sold to Tencent), and Lagou (sold to 51jobs). Helen was awarded by Forbes as Top100 VCs in China in 2018.</p><p><strong>Gary Yang</strong></p><p>Gary is Founding Partner at SkySaga Capital and Director of the China Venture Capital Association. Graduated from Tsinghua University, one of the top universities in China and the world, Gary is an experienced investor who led the investment of dozens of companies, including Yanjiyou, a well-known bookstore chain brand in China, Pencil Media, an upcoming tech media focusing on startup news, and more.</p><p>SkySaga Capital is an early to growth stage venture capital firm, with a focus on industrial upgrades such as consumption upgrade and supply chain upgrade, and deep tech such as AI and biotech.</p><p><strong>Jeff Chi</strong><br />Jeff is Founding Partner at Vickers Venture Partners and Former Chairman at Singapore Venture Capital & Private Equity Association.</p><p>Vickers is a global venture capital firm with US$700 million focused on early-stage investments in Asia and beyond. The firm announced in 2017 that it has raised US$230 million to invest in startups around the world, with a particular focus on deep tech across the globe and impact investments in emerging markets. Vickers has 8 offices around the world and is one of the largest venture capital firms in Singapore and Shanghai.</p><p><strong>Show Notes:</strong></p><p>01:04 Talk with Helen Wong</p><p>06:14 Talk with Gary Yang</p><p>10:19 Talk with Jeff Chi</p><p>Many thanks to our guests; host <strong>Oscar Ramos</strong>; producers <strong>Eva Shi</strong> and <strong>Sagar Chaudhary</strong>; editor <strong>David</strong>; organizer <strong>Chinaccelerator</strong>; and sponsor<strong> People Squared</strong>. Be sure to check out our website <a href="https://chinaccelerator.com/"><strong>www.chinaccelerator.com</strong></a></p><p>Share, subscribe, review, enjoy!</p><p>Follow us on LinkedIn:  <a href="https://chinastartuppulse.simplecast.com/episodes/www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/" target="_blank"><strong>www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/</strong></a></p><p>Email us: <a href="mailto:team@chinastartuppulse.com" target="_blank"><strong>team@chinastartuppulse.com</strong></a></p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Tue, 13 Oct 2020 02:35:07 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (SOSV, Chinaccelerator)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong>Our guests:</strong></p><p><strong>Helen Wong</strong></p><p>Helen is Partner at Qiming Venture Partners and a founding team member at GGV Capital. Qiming is an early to growth stage venture capital firm, which currently manages four USD funds and three RMB funds with over $1.7 billion in assets.</p><p>Helen’s successful exits at Qiming include Mobike (sold to Meituan), Luojiswei (unicorn valuation, sold to Tencent), and Lagou (sold to 51jobs). Helen was awarded by Forbes as Top100 VCs in China in 2018.</p><p><strong>Gary Yang</strong></p><p>Gary is Founding Partner at SkySaga Capital and Director of the China Venture Capital Association. Graduated from Tsinghua University, one of the top universities in China and the world, Gary is an experienced investor who led the investment of dozens of companies, including Yanjiyou, a well-known bookstore chain brand in China, Pencil Media, an upcoming tech media focusing on startup news, and more.</p><p>SkySaga Capital is an early to growth stage venture capital firm, with a focus on industrial upgrades such as consumption upgrade and supply chain upgrade, and deep tech such as AI and biotech.</p><p><strong>Jeff Chi</strong><br />Jeff is Founding Partner at Vickers Venture Partners and Former Chairman at Singapore Venture Capital & Private Equity Association.</p><p>Vickers is a global venture capital firm with US$700 million focused on early-stage investments in Asia and beyond. The firm announced in 2017 that it has raised US$230 million to invest in startups around the world, with a particular focus on deep tech across the globe and impact investments in emerging markets. Vickers has 8 offices around the world and is one of the largest venture capital firms in Singapore and Shanghai.</p><p><strong>Show Notes:</strong></p><p>01:04 Talk with Helen Wong</p><p>06:14 Talk with Gary Yang</p><p>10:19 Talk with Jeff Chi</p><p>Many thanks to our guests; host <strong>Oscar Ramos</strong>; producers <strong>Eva Shi</strong> and <strong>Sagar Chaudhary</strong>; editor <strong>David</strong>; organizer <strong>Chinaccelerator</strong>; and sponsor<strong> People Squared</strong>. Be sure to check out our website <a href="https://chinaccelerator.com/"><strong>www.chinaccelerator.com</strong></a></p><p>Share, subscribe, review, enjoy!</p><p>Follow us on LinkedIn:  <a href="https://chinastartuppulse.simplecast.com/episodes/www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/" target="_blank"><strong>www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/</strong></a></p><p>Email us: <a href="mailto:team@chinastartuppulse.com" target="_blank"><strong>team@chinastartuppulse.com</strong></a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>Inside the VC Mind Ep1: The Top Mistake that Founders Make During Fundraising (Helen Wong, Gary Yang, Jeff Chi)</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>SOSV, Chinaccelerator</itunes:author>
      <itunes:image href="https://image.simplecastcdn.com/images/f0ec2b13-bb5e-4311-b84c-7ccfee9698de/fddf108f-2682-4620-9831-a6712a0ca5b9/3000x3000/podcast-logo1.jpg?aid=rss_feed"/>
      <itunes:duration>00:17:59</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>Welcome to the first episode of our new series “Inside the VC Mind” where we bring you the professionals from the venture capital world, who will deliver their observations, thoughts, and opinions.

Today we are going to talk about the top one mistake that founders make during the fundraising process, with Helen Wong, Partner at Qiming Venture Partners, Gary Yang, Founding Partner at SkySaga capital, and Jeff Chi, Partner at Vickers Venture.</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>Welcome to the first episode of our new series “Inside the VC Mind” where we bring you the professionals from the venture capital world, who will deliver their observations, thoughts, and opinions.

Today we are going to talk about the top one mistake that founders make during the fundraising process, with Helen Wong, Partner at Qiming Venture Partners, Gary Yang, Founding Partner at SkySaga capital, and Jeff Chi, Partner at Vickers Venture.</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>early stage, accelerator, deep tech, investor, exits, vc, entrepreneurship, fundraising, ai, due diligence, startup, venture capital, entrepreneur, biotech, consumption upgrade, investment</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:episode>145</itunes:episode>
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      <title>Design’s Strategic Value for Business with Yiying Lu, “Fast Company&apos;s Most Creative People in Business”</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>During this week’s episode, we will discuss the value of design in early technology startups with Yiying Lu, the award-winning artist behind the Twitter Fail Whale and Dumpling emoji,  named as “Fast Company's Most Creative People in Business” and Microsoft's “Top 10 Emerging Leader in Innovation”.</p><p><strong>Show notes:</strong></p><p>02:08 Introducing Yiying Lu</p><p>03:00 How design helps with product experience</p><p>05:30 The role of emotional needs in design</p><p>10:50 Design as a strategic tool for tech companies</p><p>14:40 How early stage founders should pay attention to design</p><p>19:50 Own a cross-cultural mindset</p><p>27:33 Failed campaign examples when foreign companies enter China</p><p>31:50 Yiying’s cross-cultural campaign cases</p><p>Many thanks to our guest <strong> Yiying Lu</strong>; host <strong>Oscar Ramos</strong>; producers <strong>Eva Shi</strong> and <strong>Sagar Chaudhary</strong>; editor <strong>David</strong>; organizer <strong>Chinaccelerator</strong>; and sponsor<strong> People Squared</strong>. Be sure to check out our website <a href="https://chinaccelerator.com/"><strong>www.chinaccelerator.com</strong></a></p><p>Share, subscribe, review, enjoy!</p><p>Follow us on LinkedIn:  <a href="https://chinastartuppulse.simplecast.com/episodes/www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/" target="_blank"><strong>www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/</strong></a></p><p>Email us: <a href="mailto:team@chinastartuppulse.com" target="_blank"><strong>team@chinastartuppulse.com</strong></a></p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Sat, 19 Sep 2020 03:08:08 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Chinaccelerator, SOSV)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>During this week’s episode, we will discuss the value of design in early technology startups with Yiying Lu, the award-winning artist behind the Twitter Fail Whale and Dumpling emoji,  named as “Fast Company's Most Creative People in Business” and Microsoft's “Top 10 Emerging Leader in Innovation”.</p><p><strong>Show notes:</strong></p><p>02:08 Introducing Yiying Lu</p><p>03:00 How design helps with product experience</p><p>05:30 The role of emotional needs in design</p><p>10:50 Design as a strategic tool for tech companies</p><p>14:40 How early stage founders should pay attention to design</p><p>19:50 Own a cross-cultural mindset</p><p>27:33 Failed campaign examples when foreign companies enter China</p><p>31:50 Yiying’s cross-cultural campaign cases</p><p>Many thanks to our guest <strong> Yiying Lu</strong>; host <strong>Oscar Ramos</strong>; producers <strong>Eva Shi</strong> and <strong>Sagar Chaudhary</strong>; editor <strong>David</strong>; organizer <strong>Chinaccelerator</strong>; and sponsor<strong> People Squared</strong>. Be sure to check out our website <a href="https://chinaccelerator.com/"><strong>www.chinaccelerator.com</strong></a></p><p>Share, subscribe, review, enjoy!</p><p>Follow us on LinkedIn:  <a href="https://chinastartuppulse.simplecast.com/episodes/www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/" target="_blank"><strong>www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/</strong></a></p><p>Email us: <a href="mailto:team@chinastartuppulse.com" target="_blank"><strong>team@chinastartuppulse.com</strong></a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>Design’s Strategic Value for Business with Yiying Lu, “Fast Company&apos;s Most Creative People in Business”</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Chinaccelerator, SOSV</itunes:author>
      <itunes:image href="https://image.simplecastcdn.com/images/f0ec2b13-bb5e-4311-b84c-7ccfee9698de/31a7c337-9a33-4a74-ad77-cbbd2b3bcccd/3000x3000/yiying-lu-2-1.jpg?aid=rss_feed"/>
      <itunes:duration>00:39:04</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>In the startup world where we value technology and experiments that leverage &quot;quick and dirty&quot; prototypes, what’s the role of art and design? Especially for early stage startups, how should they utilize the power of design for their products or services? If we look at brands who are expanding to different markets, how can they develop a cross-cultural design mindset that helps them gain local recognition and avoid any sensitivities? 

During this week’s episode, we will discuss the value of design in early technology startups with Yiying Lu, the award-winning artist behind the Twitter Fail Whale and Dumpling emoji,  named as “Fast Company&apos;s Most Creative People in Business” and Microsoft&apos;s “Top 10 Emerging Leader in Innovation”.

Yiying has helped hundreds of tech startups build their brand and turn it into a competitive advantage. She believes that for technology companies, they are not B2B or B2C, but human to human, and “art is the best vehicle to communicate the core values of the human behind the technology”.

Born in Shanghai China, educated in Sydney Australia and London UK, currently based in San Francisco, Yiying will also share one of her passions about how to leverage art to bridge the east and the west and share some cross-cultural campaigns that she has been involved in the past.
</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>In the startup world where we value technology and experiments that leverage &quot;quick and dirty&quot; prototypes, what’s the role of art and design? Especially for early stage startups, how should they utilize the power of design for their products or services? If we look at brands who are expanding to different markets, how can they develop a cross-cultural design mindset that helps them gain local recognition and avoid any sensitivities? 

During this week’s episode, we will discuss the value of design in early technology startups with Yiying Lu, the award-winning artist behind the Twitter Fail Whale and Dumpling emoji,  named as “Fast Company&apos;s Most Creative People in Business” and Microsoft&apos;s “Top 10 Emerging Leader in Innovation”.

Yiying has helped hundreds of tech startups build their brand and turn it into a competitive advantage. She believes that for technology companies, they are not B2B or B2C, but human to human, and “art is the best vehicle to communicate the core values of the human behind the technology”.

Born in Shanghai China, educated in Sydney Australia and London UK, currently based in San Francisco, Yiying will also share one of her passions about how to leverage art to bridge the east and the west and share some cross-cultural campaigns that she has been involved in the past.
</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>accelerator, artist, twitter fail whale, entrepreneurship, cross-border, venture capital, entrepreneur, innovation, design, business, startups, cross-cultural, desiney, tech, creative, art</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:episode>144</itunes:episode>
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      <title>Managing a $1 billion pre-IPO fund, with Sophie Yao, China General Manager of Pegasus Tech Ventures</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>Our guest today is Sophie Yao, the China General Manager of Pegasus Tech Ventures, which some people may know for their notable investments like SpaceX and Airbnb. Sophie currently manages a $1 billion fund that predominantly focuses on pre-IPO deals. </p><p><strong>Show Notes:</strong></p><p>1:48 Introduction to Sophie Yao</p><p>2:59 The CVC 4.0 Model</p><p>4:33 Rationale behind corporate partnering with single LP funds</p><p>6:58 The $1 billion pre-IPO  fund, what it is and why Pegasus invests in pre-IPO deals</p><p>8:04 Risks associated with pre-IPO deals</p><p>9:46 Pre-requisites in a pre-IPO deal. How do you measure returns?</p><p>12:28 Role of the pre-IPO investor in supporting companies</p><p>13:40  Evaluating potential investments</p><p>16.14 Next wave of IPOs from China</p><p>20:58 Revenue vs Technology: What matters more in deep tech investment</p><p>23:12 Does investor behavior shape the type of companies in China?</p><p>24:36 China’s STAR market and how it has performed so far</p><p>26:15 Companies doing well in the STAR market</p><p>26:45 Alibaba Ant dual IPO: Inflection point in Chinese companies' perspective on IPOs</p><p>28:41 Foreign companies listing in STAR market </p><p>29:23 US-China deteriorating relations and impact on internationalization of Chinese tech startups</p><p>31:29 Luckin’s impact on the perception of listed Chinese companies</p><p>34:36 Lessons for Series A or B founders</p><p>36:54 Pegasus’ area of investment and how to contact Sophie</p><p>37:53 Pegasus’ Incubation program</p><p> </p><p>Many thanks to our guest <strong> Sophie Yao</strong>; host <strong>Oscar Ramos</strong>; producers <strong>Eva Shi</strong> and <strong>Sagar Chaudhary</strong>; editor <strong>David</strong>; organizer <strong>Chinaccelerator</strong>; and sponsor<strong> People Squared</strong>. Be sure to check out our website <a href="https://chinaccelerator.com/"><strong>www.chinaccelerator.com</strong></a></p><p>Share, subscribe, review, enjoy!</p><p>Follow us on LinkedIn:  <a href="www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/" target="_blank"><strong>www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/</strong></a></p><p>Email us: <a href="mailto:team@chinastartuppulse.com" target="_blank"><strong>team@chinastartuppulse.com</strong></a></p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Thu, 3 Sep 2020 01:00:05 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Oscar Ramos, Sophie Yao, Chinaccelerator)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Our guest today is Sophie Yao, the China General Manager of Pegasus Tech Ventures, which some people may know for their notable investments like SpaceX and Airbnb. Sophie currently manages a $1 billion fund that predominantly focuses on pre-IPO deals. </p><p><strong>Show Notes:</strong></p><p>1:48 Introduction to Sophie Yao</p><p>2:59 The CVC 4.0 Model</p><p>4:33 Rationale behind corporate partnering with single LP funds</p><p>6:58 The $1 billion pre-IPO  fund, what it is and why Pegasus invests in pre-IPO deals</p><p>8:04 Risks associated with pre-IPO deals</p><p>9:46 Pre-requisites in a pre-IPO deal. How do you measure returns?</p><p>12:28 Role of the pre-IPO investor in supporting companies</p><p>13:40  Evaluating potential investments</p><p>16.14 Next wave of IPOs from China</p><p>20:58 Revenue vs Technology: What matters more in deep tech investment</p><p>23:12 Does investor behavior shape the type of companies in China?</p><p>24:36 China’s STAR market and how it has performed so far</p><p>26:15 Companies doing well in the STAR market</p><p>26:45 Alibaba Ant dual IPO: Inflection point in Chinese companies' perspective on IPOs</p><p>28:41 Foreign companies listing in STAR market </p><p>29:23 US-China deteriorating relations and impact on internationalization of Chinese tech startups</p><p>31:29 Luckin’s impact on the perception of listed Chinese companies</p><p>34:36 Lessons for Series A or B founders</p><p>36:54 Pegasus’ area of investment and how to contact Sophie</p><p>37:53 Pegasus’ Incubation program</p><p> </p><p>Many thanks to our guest <strong> Sophie Yao</strong>; host <strong>Oscar Ramos</strong>; producers <strong>Eva Shi</strong> and <strong>Sagar Chaudhary</strong>; editor <strong>David</strong>; organizer <strong>Chinaccelerator</strong>; and sponsor<strong> People Squared</strong>. Be sure to check out our website <a href="https://chinaccelerator.com/"><strong>www.chinaccelerator.com</strong></a></p><p>Share, subscribe, review, enjoy!</p><p>Follow us on LinkedIn:  <a href="www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/" target="_blank"><strong>www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/</strong></a></p><p>Email us: <a href="mailto:team@chinastartuppulse.com" target="_blank"><strong>team@chinastartuppulse.com</strong></a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>Managing a $1 billion pre-IPO fund, with Sophie Yao, China General Manager of Pegasus Tech Ventures</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Oscar Ramos, Sophie Yao, Chinaccelerator</itunes:author>
      <itunes:image href="https://image.simplecastcdn.com/images/f0ec2b13-bb5e-4311-b84c-7ccfee9698de/904a53b1-d3bc-4d1b-b898-2cc16c6aa929/3000x3000/wechatimg136.jpg?aid=rss_feed"/>
      <itunes:duration>00:40:40</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>China is one of the world’s biggest and leading stock markets. As a result, China’s capital markets are gaining more interest from both domestic and international investors. But today, we are not talking a step back from investing in public companies and instead, talking about pre-IPO deals. 

What are pre-IPO deals? What are the risks and opportunities associated to pre-IPO deals? We also look at the typical range of investment in such deals and how similar or different are pre-IPO investors from investment bankers? 

We have the perfect guest to talk about the pre-IPO market today. Our guest today is Sophie Yao, the China General Manager of Pegasus Tech Ventures, which some people may know for their notable investments like SpaceX and Airbnb. Sophie currently manages a $1 billion fund that predominantly focuses on pre-IPO deals. She shares with us what goes on in the background when sourcing and investing in pre-IPO deals. We also touch upon the current economic tensions between the US and China and how that can impact companies looking to go public.</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>China is one of the world’s biggest and leading stock markets. As a result, China’s capital markets are gaining more interest from both domestic and international investors. But today, we are not talking a step back from investing in public companies and instead, talking about pre-IPO deals. 

What are pre-IPO deals? What are the risks and opportunities associated to pre-IPO deals? We also look at the typical range of investment in such deals and how similar or different are pre-IPO investors from investment bankers? 

We have the perfect guest to talk about the pre-IPO market today. Our guest today is Sophie Yao, the China General Manager of Pegasus Tech Ventures, which some people may know for their notable investments like SpaceX and Airbnb. Sophie currently manages a $1 billion fund that predominantly focuses on pre-IPO deals. She shares with us what goes on in the background when sourcing and investing in pre-IPO deals. We also touch upon the current economic tensions between the US and China and how that can impact companies looking to go public.</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>accelerator, investor, vc, fundraising, china, china stock market, us-china, chinaccelerator, investing, startup, venture capital, luckin coffee, ipo, pre-ipo, pegasus tech ventures</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:episode>143</itunes:episode>
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      <title>Digital Transformation: Converting Consumer Data into Gold; with Kevin Lee (IKEA), Alexis Richez (ZTP), German Torrado (Genetsis) and  Abel Zhao (Travelflan)</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>In today’s episode we are joined by Kevin Lee, CDO at IKEA China; German Torrado, Managing Director at Genetsis E-commerce; Alexis RICHEZ, Venture Development and Partnerships at ZTP (The innovation arm behind one the largest retails groups in Europe including companies like Decathlon, Leroy Merlin our Auchan); and Abel Zhao, Co-founder and CEO at TravelFlan.</p><p>Our guests come with a particular angle on data and digitalization. With their wealth of experiences, you will gain insightful learnings on how to use data to innovate within your organization especially in a post-Covid19 world.</p><p><strong>Show Notes</strong></p><p>[02:11] Introduction to Kevin Lee and understanding what Ikea is doing with data and insights<br />[03:48] Introduction to German Torrado and Genetsis E-commerce<br />[04:48]<strong> </strong>Introduction to Alexis Richez and ZTP<br />[06:21] Introduction to Abel Zhao and TravelFlan<br />[09:17] Is data the new oil? How is IKEA getting value from data today?<br />[13:46] Awareness of data among brands and the relevance of data in their agenda<br />[16:56] What is the readiness level of companies? Are they really aware of how much value they can derive from data? Are they talking about data is the new oil but have no idea what it is exactly or are they ready to extract value from data?<br />[20:50] Reaction from brands about data that is hard to get<br />[22:53] Most relevant obstacles in the present time to drive digital transformation<br />[35:35] Impact of GDPR for businesses<br />[37:35] Getting key stakeholders to buy into the “Data is the Future” narrative and Performance metrics when implementing a data strategy </p><p>Many thanks to our guest <strong> Kevin Lee, German Torrado, Alexis Richez and Abel Zhao</strong>; host <strong>Oscar Ramos</strong>; producers <strong>Eva Shi</strong> and <strong>Sagar Chaudhary</strong>; editor <strong>David</strong>; organizer <strong>Chinaccelerator</strong>; and sponsor<strong> People Squared</strong>. Be sure to check out our website <strong>www.chinaccelerator.com</strong></p><p>Share, subscribe, review, enjoy!</p><p>Follow us on <a href="https://www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/" target="_blank">LinkedIn</a>.</p><p>Email us: <a href="mailto:team@chinastartuppulse.com" target="_blank"><strong>team@chinastartuppulse.com</strong></a></p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Fri, 14 Aug 2020 01:00:31 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Abel Zhao, SOSV, Kevin Lee, German Torrado, Alexis Richez, Oscar Ramos, Chinaccelerator)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>In today’s episode we are joined by Kevin Lee, CDO at IKEA China; German Torrado, Managing Director at Genetsis E-commerce; Alexis RICHEZ, Venture Development and Partnerships at ZTP (The innovation arm behind one the largest retails groups in Europe including companies like Decathlon, Leroy Merlin our Auchan); and Abel Zhao, Co-founder and CEO at TravelFlan.</p><p>Our guests come with a particular angle on data and digitalization. With their wealth of experiences, you will gain insightful learnings on how to use data to innovate within your organization especially in a post-Covid19 world.</p><p><strong>Show Notes</strong></p><p>[02:11] Introduction to Kevin Lee and understanding what Ikea is doing with data and insights<br />[03:48] Introduction to German Torrado and Genetsis E-commerce<br />[04:48]<strong> </strong>Introduction to Alexis Richez and ZTP<br />[06:21] Introduction to Abel Zhao and TravelFlan<br />[09:17] Is data the new oil? How is IKEA getting value from data today?<br />[13:46] Awareness of data among brands and the relevance of data in their agenda<br />[16:56] What is the readiness level of companies? Are they really aware of how much value they can derive from data? Are they talking about data is the new oil but have no idea what it is exactly or are they ready to extract value from data?<br />[20:50] Reaction from brands about data that is hard to get<br />[22:53] Most relevant obstacles in the present time to drive digital transformation<br />[35:35] Impact of GDPR for businesses<br />[37:35] Getting key stakeholders to buy into the “Data is the Future” narrative and Performance metrics when implementing a data strategy </p><p>Many thanks to our guest <strong> Kevin Lee, German Torrado, Alexis Richez and Abel Zhao</strong>; host <strong>Oscar Ramos</strong>; producers <strong>Eva Shi</strong> and <strong>Sagar Chaudhary</strong>; editor <strong>David</strong>; organizer <strong>Chinaccelerator</strong>; and sponsor<strong> People Squared</strong>. Be sure to check out our website <strong>www.chinaccelerator.com</strong></p><p>Share, subscribe, review, enjoy!</p><p>Follow us on <a href="https://www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/" target="_blank">LinkedIn</a>.</p><p>Email us: <a href="mailto:team@chinastartuppulse.com" target="_blank"><strong>team@chinastartuppulse.com</strong></a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>Digital Transformation: Converting Consumer Data into Gold; with Kevin Lee (IKEA), Alexis Richez (ZTP), German Torrado (Genetsis) and  Abel Zhao (Travelflan)</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Abel Zhao, SOSV, Kevin Lee, German Torrado, Alexis Richez, Oscar Ramos, Chinaccelerator</itunes:author>
      <itunes:duration>00:48:40</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>Data and digitalization are hot topics not only in the startup ecosystem but also in the corporate world. We often hear about legacy businesses looking to transform themselves by using data to improve their business but what is the actual reality of data for businesses today? How are companies building brands based around data? Are the companies ready and are they really aware of how much value they can derive from data? What obstacles stand in their way?

To answer these questions and more, we are bringing you today a very special episode that is part of &quot;Pathway2Innovation&quot;. A regular online and offline events series initiated by the Corporate Innovation team of Chinaccelerator that will bring together startups and corporates to explore some of the most relevant topics in the open innovation space.

In today’s episode we are joined by Kevin Lee, CDO at IKEA China; German Torrado, Managing Director at Genetsis E-commerce; Alexis RICHEZ, Venture Development and Partnerships at ZTP (The innovation arm behind one the largest retails groups in Europe including companies like Decathlon, Leroy Merlin our Auchan); and Abel Zhao, Co-founder and CEO at TravelFlan.

Our guests come with a particular angle on data and digitalization. With their wealth of experiences, you will gain insightful learnings on how to use data to innovate within your organization especially in a post-Covid19 world. </itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>Data and digitalization are hot topics not only in the startup ecosystem but also in the corporate world. We often hear about legacy businesses looking to transform themselves by using data to improve their business but what is the actual reality of data for businesses today? How are companies building brands based around data? Are the companies ready and are they really aware of how much value they can derive from data? What obstacles stand in their way?

To answer these questions and more, we are bringing you today a very special episode that is part of &quot;Pathway2Innovation&quot;. A regular online and offline events series initiated by the Corporate Innovation team of Chinaccelerator that will bring together startups and corporates to explore some of the most relevant topics in the open innovation space.

In today’s episode we are joined by Kevin Lee, CDO at IKEA China; German Torrado, Managing Director at Genetsis E-commerce; Alexis RICHEZ, Venture Development and Partnerships at ZTP (The innovation arm behind one the largest retails groups in Europe including companies like Decathlon, Leroy Merlin our Auchan); and Abel Zhao, Co-founder and CEO at TravelFlan.

Our guests come with a particular angle on data and digitalization. With their wealth of experiences, you will gain insightful learnings on how to use data to innovate within your organization especially in a post-Covid19 world. </itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>accelerator, genetsis, corporate, china startup pulse, chinastartuppulse, data, vc, china, china accelerator, chinaccelerator, corporate innovation, technology, startup, venture capital, business transformation, business, ztp, travelflan, ikea, investment, ecommerce</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
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      <itunes:episode>142</itunes:episode>
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      <title>How Citybox Finds Own Position Among Fierce Unmanned Retail Competitions, with Co-founder &amp; COO Neo Lv</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>Our guest today, Neo Lv, is one of the company’s co-founders and today’s COO.</p><p>Show Notes:</p><p>02:11 Introduction to Neo Lv and Citybox</p><p>04:47 Unmanned retail hype in 2017 & what makes Citybox unique</p><p>08:54 Monetize data</p><p>12:51 How Citybox sustainably gets profitable among the strong competitions</p><p>18:27 Competitions bring new growth opportunities</p><p>24:47 How Citybox built their first generation of the smart vending machines</p><p>29:08 The future of unmanned retail</p><p>33:45 Compare China with other markets globally</p><p>Many thanks to our guest <strong> Neo Lv</strong>; host <strong>Oscar Ramos</strong>; producers <strong>Eva Shi</strong> and <strong>Sagar Chaudhary</strong>; editor <strong>David</strong>; organizer <strong>Chinaccelerator</strong>; and sponsor<strong> People Squared</strong>. Be sure to check out our website <strong>www.chinaccelerator.com</strong></p><p>Share, subscribe, review, enjoy!</p><p>Follow us on LinkedIn: <strong>www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/</strong></p><p>Email us: <a href="mailto:team@chinastartuppulse.com" target="_blank"><strong>team@chinastartuppulse.com</strong></a></p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Fri, 7 Aug 2020 02:39:11 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Chinaccelerator, SOSV)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Our guest today, Neo Lv, is one of the company’s co-founders and today’s COO.</p><p>Show Notes:</p><p>02:11 Introduction to Neo Lv and Citybox</p><p>04:47 Unmanned retail hype in 2017 & what makes Citybox unique</p><p>08:54 Monetize data</p><p>12:51 How Citybox sustainably gets profitable among the strong competitions</p><p>18:27 Competitions bring new growth opportunities</p><p>24:47 How Citybox built their first generation of the smart vending machines</p><p>29:08 The future of unmanned retail</p><p>33:45 Compare China with other markets globally</p><p>Many thanks to our guest <strong> Neo Lv</strong>; host <strong>Oscar Ramos</strong>; producers <strong>Eva Shi</strong> and <strong>Sagar Chaudhary</strong>; editor <strong>David</strong>; organizer <strong>Chinaccelerator</strong>; and sponsor<strong> People Squared</strong>. Be sure to check out our website <strong>www.chinaccelerator.com</strong></p><p>Share, subscribe, review, enjoy!</p><p>Follow us on LinkedIn: <strong>www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/</strong></p><p>Email us: <a href="mailto:team@chinastartuppulse.com" target="_blank"><strong>team@chinastartuppulse.com</strong></a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>How Citybox Finds Own Position Among Fierce Unmanned Retail Competitions, with Co-founder &amp; COO Neo Lv</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Chinaccelerator, SOSV</itunes:author>
      <itunes:image href="https://image.simplecastcdn.com/images/f0ec2b13-bb5e-4311-b84c-7ccfee9698de/077bb2bf-687a-481f-bb69-3a4611f0c976/3000x3000/neo-lv.jpg?aid=rss_feed"/>
      <itunes:duration>00:39:03</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>By the end of 2017, over 200 unmanned store startups were launched in China, which attracted more than US$620 million investment just during that year. However, after the hype faded, only a few companies survived from the fierce competitions, and Citybox is one of them.

Citybox started their business on a totally different path. As a result, their smart vending machine solution can be flexibly deployed in different scenarios which allows them to find the right channels for distribution. In 2017 and 2018, Citybox raised Series A and B from top VCs, like GGV, ZhenFund and SIG China.

Our guest today, Neo Lv, is one of the company’s co-founders and today’s COO. He will take us back to the initial stage of the company and share how Citybox decided to take a very different playbook in terms of business strategy, coming from a deep understanding of the industry and a very lean startup technology approach. Instead of spending their funding on business development and developing hardware, Citybox concentrated their efforts to automate their operations. Today, Citybox is also a great marketing tool for brands to test and launch new products thanks to the data they can collect from a very loyal customer base.</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>By the end of 2017, over 200 unmanned store startups were launched in China, which attracted more than US$620 million investment just during that year. However, after the hype faded, only a few companies survived from the fierce competitions, and Citybox is one of them.

Citybox started their business on a totally different path. As a result, their smart vending machine solution can be flexibly deployed in different scenarios which allows them to find the right channels for distribution. In 2017 and 2018, Citybox raised Series A and B from top VCs, like GGV, ZhenFund and SIG China.

Our guest today, Neo Lv, is one of the company’s co-founders and today’s COO. He will take us back to the initial stage of the company and share how Citybox decided to take a very different playbook in terms of business strategy, coming from a deep understanding of the industry and a very lean startup technology approach. Instead of spending their funding on business development and developing hardware, Citybox concentrated their efforts to automate their operations. Today, Citybox is also a great marketing tool for brands to test and launch new products thanks to the data they can collect from a very loyal customer base.</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>accelerator, citybox, smart vending machine, china, entrerpeneur, amazon go, chinaccelerator, unmanned retail, new retail, sosv, startup, venture capital, unmanned shelf, unmanned stores</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
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      <itunes:episode>141</itunes:episode>
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      <title>Demystifying the World of DeFi, with Cao Yin, Founding Partner of Digital Renaissance Foundation</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>In this episode, we have with us Cao Yin, Founding Partner of Digital Renaissance Foundation, a Shanghai-based company that is helping to accelerate the future of digital governance by consulting, incubating and financing projects in the blockchain ecosystem and investor in the first DeFi project launched in China.</p><p><strong>Show Notes</strong></p><p>[1:55] Introduction to Cao Yin</p><p>[8:46] What makes crypto and blockchain so different? Hype vs Reality?</p><p>[13:15] DeFi use cases</p><p>[17:10] Winners and Losers from DeFi</p><p>[21:26] How DeFi affects the government</p><p>[25:04] Risks of DeFi. What can go wrong?</p><p>[29:10] Chinese government’s view on DeFi</p><p>[32:19] Opportunities for DeFi startups today</p><p>[33:58] Chinese DeFi investors</p><p>[36:27] Contact Cao Yin and Digital Rennaisance Foundation</p><p>Many thanks to our guest <strong> Cao Yin</strong>; host <strong>Oscar Ramos</strong>; producers <strong>Eva Shi</strong> and <strong>Sagar Chaudhary</strong>; editor <strong>David</strong>; organizer <strong>Chinaccelerator</strong>; and sponsor<strong> People Squared</strong>. Be sure to check out our website <a href="www.chinaccelerator.com" target="_blank"><strong>www.chinaccelerator.com</strong></a></p><p>Share, subscribe, review, enjoy!</p><p>Follow us on LinkedIn: <a href="www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/" target="_blank"><strong>www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/</strong></a></p><p>Email us: <a href="team@chinastartuppulse.com" target="_blank"><strong>team@chinastartuppulse.com</strong></a></p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Thu, 30 Jul 2020 01:00:15 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (SOSV, Chinaccelerator)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>In this episode, we have with us Cao Yin, Founding Partner of Digital Renaissance Foundation, a Shanghai-based company that is helping to accelerate the future of digital governance by consulting, incubating and financing projects in the blockchain ecosystem and investor in the first DeFi project launched in China.</p><p><strong>Show Notes</strong></p><p>[1:55] Introduction to Cao Yin</p><p>[8:46] What makes crypto and blockchain so different? Hype vs Reality?</p><p>[13:15] DeFi use cases</p><p>[17:10] Winners and Losers from DeFi</p><p>[21:26] How DeFi affects the government</p><p>[25:04] Risks of DeFi. What can go wrong?</p><p>[29:10] Chinese government’s view on DeFi</p><p>[32:19] Opportunities for DeFi startups today</p><p>[33:58] Chinese DeFi investors</p><p>[36:27] Contact Cao Yin and Digital Rennaisance Foundation</p><p>Many thanks to our guest <strong> Cao Yin</strong>; host <strong>Oscar Ramos</strong>; producers <strong>Eva Shi</strong> and <strong>Sagar Chaudhary</strong>; editor <strong>David</strong>; organizer <strong>Chinaccelerator</strong>; and sponsor<strong> People Squared</strong>. Be sure to check out our website <a href="www.chinaccelerator.com" target="_blank"><strong>www.chinaccelerator.com</strong></a></p><p>Share, subscribe, review, enjoy!</p><p>Follow us on LinkedIn: <a href="www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/" target="_blank"><strong>www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/</strong></a></p><p>Email us: <a href="team@chinastartuppulse.com" target="_blank"><strong>team@chinastartuppulse.com</strong></a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>Demystifying the World of DeFi, with Cao Yin, Founding Partner of Digital Renaissance Foundation</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>SOSV, Chinaccelerator</itunes:author>
      <itunes:image href="https://image.simplecastcdn.com/images/f0ec2b13-bb5e-4311-b84c-7ccfee9698de/fb14d900-36b2-43cd-8d89-4e07b70728a9/3000x3000/wechatimg40.jpg?aid=rss_feed"/>
      <itunes:duration>00:38:37</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>DeFi or Decentralized Finance has become the hottest commodity in the blockchain space today. The DeFi movement follows a suite of strong hypes in the industry after ICOs, STOs, and IEOs. Today, over $2 billion dollars worth of tokens are locked in DeFi projects. 

Some of you might be wondering what is DeFi? But once you understand the concept the real questions are: what makes DeFi so different? Is it just another hype in the crypto space? Who are the winners and losers? 

Chinese investors are among the most active investors in the space, Does this bring additional value or opportunities for Chinese DeFi startups? And how does the Chinese government come into the equation?

To help us answer these questions and more, we have invited to the show, Cao Yin, Founding Partner of Digital Renaissance Foundation, a Shanghai-based company that is helping to accelerate future of digital governance by consulting, incubating and financing projects in the blockchain ecosystem and investor in the first DeFi project launched in China.</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>DeFi or Decentralized Finance has become the hottest commodity in the blockchain space today. The DeFi movement follows a suite of strong hypes in the industry after ICOs, STOs, and IEOs. Today, over $2 billion dollars worth of tokens are locked in DeFi projects. 

Some of you might be wondering what is DeFi? But once you understand the concept the real questions are: what makes DeFi so different? Is it just another hype in the crypto space? Who are the winners and losers? 

Chinese investors are among the most active investors in the space, Does this bring additional value or opportunities for Chinese DeFi startups? And how does the Chinese government come into the equation?

To help us answer these questions and more, we have invited to the show, Cao Yin, Founding Partner of Digital Renaissance Foundation, a Shanghai-based company that is helping to accelerate future of digital governance by consulting, incubating and financing projects in the blockchain ecosystem and investor in the first DeFi project launched in China.</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>cryptocurrency, decentralized finance, crypto, vc, btc, eth, china, chinaccelerator, defi, startup, venture capital, cryptocurrencies, regulations, finance, blockchain, ethereum, investment, bitcoin</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:episode>140</itunes:episode>
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      <title>China&apos;s Changing Regulations on Gaming, with Greg Pilarowski, Legal Expert &amp; Founder of Pillar Legal</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>Today, we have Greg Pilarowski, Founder of Pillar Legal, a boutique law firm with offices in Shanghai and San Francisco that provides legal support for technology and entertainment companies with an interest in China and the US. Before founding Pillar Legal, Greg was General Counsel at Shanda Interactive Entertainment, at that time China’s leading interactive entertainment company.</p><p>Show Notes:</p><p>02:20 Introduction to Greg Pilarowski</p><p>04:40 Working in Shanda Interactive Entertainment</p><p>07:20 The birth of the free-to-play model</p><p>10:10 Gaming regulations in China</p><p>12:22 Two key regulations that you must know</p><p>14:46 Criterium for selecting games</p><p>20:24 The regulations on gamification</p><p>21:55  Resources to secure your games approval</p><p>24:35 Do new game updates need constant approval?</p><p>25:40 How can foreign game companies enter China?</p><p>29:48 Chinese companies taking games outside of China</p><p>31:34 The acquisitions strategy of Chinese game companies</p><p>32:50 Contact Pillar Legal</p><p>Many thanks to our guest <strong> Greg Pilarowski</strong>; host <strong>Oscar Ramos</strong>; producers <strong>Eva Shi</strong> and <strong>Sagar Chaudhary</strong>; editor <strong>David</strong>; organizer <strong>Chinaccelerator</strong>; and sponsor<strong> People Squared</strong>. Be sure to check out our website <strong>www.chinaccelerator.com</strong></p><p>Share, subscribe, review, enjoy!</p><p>Follow us on LinkedIn: <strong>www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/</strong></p><p>Email us: <strong>team@chinastartuppulse.com</strong></p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Thu, 23 Jul 2020 02:27:53 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (SOSV, Chinaccelerator)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Today, we have Greg Pilarowski, Founder of Pillar Legal, a boutique law firm with offices in Shanghai and San Francisco that provides legal support for technology and entertainment companies with an interest in China and the US. Before founding Pillar Legal, Greg was General Counsel at Shanda Interactive Entertainment, at that time China’s leading interactive entertainment company.</p><p>Show Notes:</p><p>02:20 Introduction to Greg Pilarowski</p><p>04:40 Working in Shanda Interactive Entertainment</p><p>07:20 The birth of the free-to-play model</p><p>10:10 Gaming regulations in China</p><p>12:22 Two key regulations that you must know</p><p>14:46 Criterium for selecting games</p><p>20:24 The regulations on gamification</p><p>21:55  Resources to secure your games approval</p><p>24:35 Do new game updates need constant approval?</p><p>25:40 How can foreign game companies enter China?</p><p>29:48 Chinese companies taking games outside of China</p><p>31:34 The acquisitions strategy of Chinese game companies</p><p>32:50 Contact Pillar Legal</p><p>Many thanks to our guest <strong> Greg Pilarowski</strong>; host <strong>Oscar Ramos</strong>; producers <strong>Eva Shi</strong> and <strong>Sagar Chaudhary</strong>; editor <strong>David</strong>; organizer <strong>Chinaccelerator</strong>; and sponsor<strong> People Squared</strong>. Be sure to check out our website <strong>www.chinaccelerator.com</strong></p><p>Share, subscribe, review, enjoy!</p><p>Follow us on LinkedIn: <strong>www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/</strong></p><p>Email us: <strong>team@chinastartuppulse.com</strong></p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>China&apos;s Changing Regulations on Gaming, with Greg Pilarowski, Legal Expert &amp; Founder of Pillar Legal</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>SOSV, Chinaccelerator</itunes:author>
      <itunes:image href="https://image.simplecastcdn.com/images/f0ec2b13-bb5e-4311-b84c-7ccfee9698de/b9edaf4a-783e-4371-98ce-c7c4cc23c4fc/3000x3000/greg.jpg?aid=rss_feed"/>
      <itunes:duration>00:34:06</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>China is the largest online gaming market in the world but has always been a hard market to crack for international gaming companies. The regulations are getting more strict and recently, over 2,500 games were just removed from Apple’s App Store. Those that want to play in China have to face a lengthy approval process to get a license. In the meanwhile, Chinese game companies like Tencent, the largest gaming company in the world, are proactively exporting their games to Southeast Asia, India, US, and Europe.

Although difficult, it is still possible for foreign companies to benefit from the Chinese market, but how do game regulations work? What should foreign game publishers consider before bringing their games to China? What’s the expansion playbook?

Today, we have the perfect guest to answer those questions, Greg Pilarowski, Founder of Pillar Legal, a boutique law firm with offices in Shanghai and San Francisco that provides legal support for technology and entertainment companies with an interest in China and the US. Before founding Pillar Legal, Greg was General Counsel at Shanda Interactive Entertainment, at that time China’s leading interactive entertainment company. He witnessed the evolution of the gaming industry in China and legal affairs that have impacted the business, which today he can use to advise gaming companies.</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>China is the largest online gaming market in the world but has always been a hard market to crack for international gaming companies. The regulations are getting more strict and recently, over 2,500 games were just removed from Apple’s App Store. Those that want to play in China have to face a lengthy approval process to get a license. In the meanwhile, Chinese game companies like Tencent, the largest gaming company in the world, are proactively exporting their games to Southeast Asia, India, US, and Europe.

Although difficult, it is still possible for foreign companies to benefit from the Chinese market, but how do game regulations work? What should foreign game publishers consider before bringing their games to China? What’s the expansion playbook?

Today, we have the perfect guest to answer those questions, Greg Pilarowski, Founder of Pillar Legal, a boutique law firm with offices in Shanghai and San Francisco that provides legal support for technology and entertainment companies with an interest in China and the US. Before founding Pillar Legal, Greg was General Counsel at Shanda Interactive Entertainment, at that time China’s leading interactive entertainment company. He witnessed the evolution of the gaming industry in China and legal affairs that have impacted the business, which today he can use to advise gaming companies.</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>accelerator, free-to-play model, censorship, chinaccelerator, game license, game approval, sosv, game studio, gaming regulations, regulations, online gaming, gamification, startups, entrepreneurs, tencent, game publisher, china gaming</itunes:keywords>
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      <itunes:episode>139</itunes:episode>
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      <title>Building the world&apos;s leading mobile analytics platform from China, with Bertrand Schmitt, Co-founder and Chairman of App Annie</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>Today, we have with us Bertrand Schmitt, Co-Founder & Chairman at App Annie, a leading mobile market data and analytics platform with data on over 8 million apps and thousands of websites. App Annie is one of the most trusted names in mobile data analytics.</p><p>Show Notes:</p><p>1:53 Introduction to Bertrand Schmitt</p><p>4:55 Early days of the mobile ecosystem and the problems within</p><p>6:28 Evolution of mobile operators' role in the industry</p><p>8:57 Centralization of content distribution in the mobile space</p><p>9:59 Apple vs Android ecosystem</p><p>10:59 Getting into the world of analytics and inspiration behind App Annie</p><p>12:26 Beginning of the China Story</p><p>14:55 Deciding to go into entrepreneurship in mobile analytics</p><p>16:30 Mobile analytics: Global problem or local (China) problem?</p><p>17:37 Perception of AppAnnie in the global market</p><p>18:57 Was China a critical element of success?</p><p>21:00 Experience of overseas fundraising from China</p><p>25:05 What triggered the move from Beijing to San Francisco</p><p>28:26 Learnings/ findings working across multiple geographical locations </p><p>32:06 Instrumental roles that made a difference to the company</p><p>33:12 Critical moment of evolution in China’s mobile industry/ecosystem</p><p>37:00 Lessons for entrepreneurs</p><p>Many thanks to our guest <strong> Bertrand Schmitt</strong>; host <strong>Oscar Ramos</strong>; producers <strong>Eva Shi</strong> and <strong>Sagar Chaudhary</strong>; editor <strong>David</strong>; organizer <strong>Chinaccelerator</strong>; and sponsor<strong> People Squared</strong>. Be sure to check out our website <strong>www.chinaccelerator.com</strong></p><p>Share, subscribe, review, enjoy!</p><p>Follow us on LinkedIn: <strong>www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/</strong></p><p>Email us: <strong>team@chinastartuppulse.com</strong></p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Tue, 14 Jul 2020 01:00:02 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Oscar Ramos, Chinaccelerator, SOSV, Bertrand Schmitt)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Today, we have with us Bertrand Schmitt, Co-Founder & Chairman at App Annie, a leading mobile market data and analytics platform with data on over 8 million apps and thousands of websites. App Annie is one of the most trusted names in mobile data analytics.</p><p>Show Notes:</p><p>1:53 Introduction to Bertrand Schmitt</p><p>4:55 Early days of the mobile ecosystem and the problems within</p><p>6:28 Evolution of mobile operators' role in the industry</p><p>8:57 Centralization of content distribution in the mobile space</p><p>9:59 Apple vs Android ecosystem</p><p>10:59 Getting into the world of analytics and inspiration behind App Annie</p><p>12:26 Beginning of the China Story</p><p>14:55 Deciding to go into entrepreneurship in mobile analytics</p><p>16:30 Mobile analytics: Global problem or local (China) problem?</p><p>17:37 Perception of AppAnnie in the global market</p><p>18:57 Was China a critical element of success?</p><p>21:00 Experience of overseas fundraising from China</p><p>25:05 What triggered the move from Beijing to San Francisco</p><p>28:26 Learnings/ findings working across multiple geographical locations </p><p>32:06 Instrumental roles that made a difference to the company</p><p>33:12 Critical moment of evolution in China’s mobile industry/ecosystem</p><p>37:00 Lessons for entrepreneurs</p><p>Many thanks to our guest <strong> Bertrand Schmitt</strong>; host <strong>Oscar Ramos</strong>; producers <strong>Eva Shi</strong> and <strong>Sagar Chaudhary</strong>; editor <strong>David</strong>; organizer <strong>Chinaccelerator</strong>; and sponsor<strong> People Squared</strong>. Be sure to check out our website <strong>www.chinaccelerator.com</strong></p><p>Share, subscribe, review, enjoy!</p><p>Follow us on LinkedIn: <strong>www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/</strong></p><p>Email us: <strong>team@chinastartuppulse.com</strong></p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>Building the world&apos;s leading mobile analytics platform from China, with Bertrand Schmitt, Co-founder and Chairman of App Annie</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Oscar Ramos, Chinaccelerator, SOSV, Bertrand Schmitt</itunes:author>
      <itunes:image href="https://image.simplecastcdn.com/images/f0ec2b13-bb5e-4311-b84c-7ccfee9698de/feb41f63-d52a-4f14-abdf-aa405cb76e4f/3000x3000/0.jpg?aid=rss_feed"/>
      <itunes:duration>00:39:25</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>How do you build a global business from China? What are the opportunities and challenges for founders operating in multiple geographical locations?

Today, we have with us Bertrand Schmitt, Co-Founder &amp; Chairman at App Annie, a leading mobile market data and analytics platform with data on over 8 million apps and thousands of websites. Today, App Annie is one of the most trusted names in mobile data analytics. 

As someone who entered the world of analytics in the early 2000s, Bertrand is a strong believer in the role of data and metrics in helping businesses build the products their customers want. With the growth of mobile apps, the need for new analytics was the inspiration to launch App Annie.

In today’s episode, Bertrand takes us back to the initial stage of development of mobile data analytics with the advent of the iPhone and App Store, and how he identified a problem that was yet to surface and started App Annie. We then dive deep into how he moved to China and ended up launching a global business from Beijing at a time when the company hardly had any tangible China market exposure. </itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>How do you build a global business from China? What are the opportunities and challenges for founders operating in multiple geographical locations?

Today, we have with us Bertrand Schmitt, Co-Founder &amp; Chairman at App Annie, a leading mobile market data and analytics platform with data on over 8 million apps and thousands of websites. Today, App Annie is one of the most trusted names in mobile data analytics. 

As someone who entered the world of analytics in the early 2000s, Bertrand is a strong believer in the role of data and metrics in helping businesses build the products their customers want. With the growth of mobile apps, the need for new analytics was the inspiration to launch App Annie.

In today’s episode, Bertrand takes us back to the initial stage of development of mobile data analytics with the advent of the iPhone and App Store, and how he identified a problem that was yet to surface and started App Annie. We then dive deep into how he moved to China and ended up launching a global business from Beijing at a time when the company hardly had any tangible China market exposure. </itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>ios, accelerator, data, entrepreneurship, fundraising, china, ecosystem, app annie, founder, data analytics, silicon valley, chinaccelerator, mobile, sosv, venture capital, analytics, apple, global business, mobile analytics, startups, android, beijing</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:episode>138</itunes:episode>
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      <title>Unraveling Digital Ads: The Cash Cow for Alibaba, with Donna Li, Digital Advertising Veteran</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>Today we talk with Donna Li, a digital marketing veteran, who was part of the team that launched Alimama, the digital advertisement division of Alibaba, which is also the largest player by revenue in the digital advertising space in China. </p><p>Show Notes:</p><p>02:06 Introducing Donna Li</p><p>03:25 How did you get started in digital marketing in China</p><p>06:06 Digital marketing in China at around 2010</p><p>10:15 Transition from Yahoo to Alibaba</p><p>13:12 Advertising: Taobao’s monetization model</p><p>18:26 Alimama: Cash Cow for Alibaba</p><p>22:15 Is Amazon following a similar playbook?</p><p>25:50 New inventor: Bytedance</p><p>29:55 Advertisement as a business model for early-stage startups</p><p>34:10 Build digital measurement currency at Nielsen</p><p>35:42 Challenges for startups</p><p>Many thanks to our guest Donna Li; host Oscar Ramos; producers Eva Shi and Sagar Chaudhary; editor David; organizer Chinaccelerator; and sponsor People Squared. Be sure to check out our website www.chinaccelerator.com</p><p>Share, subscribe, review, enjoy!</p><p>Follow us on LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/</p><p>Email us: team@chinastartuppulse.com</p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Tue, 7 Jul 2020 01:00:22 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (SOSV, Chinaccelerator)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Today we talk with Donna Li, a digital marketing veteran, who was part of the team that launched Alimama, the digital advertisement division of Alibaba, which is also the largest player by revenue in the digital advertising space in China. </p><p>Show Notes:</p><p>02:06 Introducing Donna Li</p><p>03:25 How did you get started in digital marketing in China</p><p>06:06 Digital marketing in China at around 2010</p><p>10:15 Transition from Yahoo to Alibaba</p><p>13:12 Advertising: Taobao’s monetization model</p><p>18:26 Alimama: Cash Cow for Alibaba</p><p>22:15 Is Amazon following a similar playbook?</p><p>25:50 New inventor: Bytedance</p><p>29:55 Advertisement as a business model for early-stage startups</p><p>34:10 Build digital measurement currency at Nielsen</p><p>35:42 Challenges for startups</p><p>Many thanks to our guest Donna Li; host Oscar Ramos; producers Eva Shi and Sagar Chaudhary; editor David; organizer Chinaccelerator; and sponsor People Squared. Be sure to check out our website www.chinaccelerator.com</p><p>Share, subscribe, review, enjoy!</p><p>Follow us on LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/</p><p>Email us: team@chinastartuppulse.com</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>Unraveling Digital Ads: The Cash Cow for Alibaba, with Donna Li, Digital Advertising Veteran</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>SOSV, Chinaccelerator</itunes:author>
      <itunes:image href="https://image.simplecastcdn.com/images/f0ec2b13-bb5e-4311-b84c-7ccfee9698de/3e9f22db-6355-4475-b3ae-55f24e9903fa/3000x3000/donna-li.jpg?aid=rss_feed"/>
      <itunes:duration>00:38:44</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>Today we talk with Donna Li, a digital marketing veteran, who was part of the team that launched Alimama, the digital advertisement division of Alibaba, which is also the largest player by revenue in the digital advertising space in China. 

In this episode, Donna will bring us back to the early days when Alibaba, as an e-commerce company, started to explore the advertising revenue model. Donna will talk about how she worked for Yahoo China, which then became a strategic investor in Alibaba, and how she helped built Alimama.

She will also share how she supported Taobao, a C2C e-commerce player, to beat their direct competitor eachnet which at the time had over 90% market share and was owned by eBay. At the end of the conversation, she will talk about the advertisement model in social networks as former CMO of Renren, the largest copycat of Facebook in China, and one of the most influential social networks at that time. 

Want to learn how Alibaba became successful through advertisement and is Amazon today following a similar playbook? Come join us to enjoy the conversation right now!</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>Today we talk with Donna Li, a digital marketing veteran, who was part of the team that launched Alimama, the digital advertisement division of Alibaba, which is also the largest player by revenue in the digital advertising space in China. 

In this episode, Donna will bring us back to the early days when Alibaba, as an e-commerce company, started to explore the advertising revenue model. Donna will talk about how she worked for Yahoo China, which then became a strategic investor in Alibaba, and how she helped built Alimama.

She will also share how she supported Taobao, a C2C e-commerce player, to beat their direct competitor eachnet which at the time had over 90% market share and was owned by eBay. At the end of the conversation, she will talk about the advertisement model in social networks as former CMO of Renren, the largest copycat of Facebook in China, and one of the most influential social networks at that time. 

Want to learn how Alibaba became successful through advertisement and is Amazon today following a similar playbook? Come join us to enjoy the conversation right now!</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>accelerator, digital marketing, marketing, alibaba, business model, digital ads, nielsen, founders, advertising, chinaccelerator, echnet, advertisement, marketing team, revenue model, entrepreneur, amazon, alimama, social networks, startups, bytedance, ebay, taobao, yahoo china, yahoo, monetization, ecommerce, renren</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:episode>137</itunes:episode>
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      <title>Scaling WeChat to One Billion Users Globally, with Stephen Wang, Former User Growth &amp; Engagement Director at WeChat</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>Our guest today is Stephen Wang, who co-founded Rotten Tomatoes, a leading entertainment website focused on movie reviews and news, and most recently led the user growth and engagement at WeChat in the past 6 years until 2019. At WeChat, he managed a team of product managers and engineers to help scale WeChat from 300M to 1B users in China and around the world. </p><p><strong>Show Notes:</strong></p><p>2:15 Welcome Stephen Wang</p><p>2:50 How different WeChat is as a product from the western perspective</p><p>5:37 What makes WeChat instrumental for people’s life</p><p>12:42 Innovation inspired by Tencent team culture</p><p>16:10 Product design in China (Examples: Douban, Weibo and Xiaomi)</p><p>21:50 What makes China a special ecosystem for digital product development</p><p>25:30 WeChat’s killer features: WeChat payment, Red Packets, Mini program</p><p>32:35 Balance privacy protection and user growth</p><p>39:20 Skills needed for talents in Tencent</p><p>43:35 Are Chinese companies hiring more international talents</p><p>49:10 The major shift of product management philosophy in China</p><p>Many thanks to our guest Stephen Wang; host Oscar Ramos; producers Eva Shi and Sagar Chaudhary; editor David; organizer Chinaccelerator; and sponsor People Squared. Be sure to check out our website www.chinaccelerator.com</p><p>Share, subscribe, review, enjoy!</p><p>Follow us on LinkedIn: <strong>www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/</strong></p><p>Email us: <strong>team@chinastartuppulse.com</strong></p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Wed, 10 Jun 2020 02:10:49 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Orbit Startups)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Our guest today is Stephen Wang, who co-founded Rotten Tomatoes, a leading entertainment website focused on movie reviews and news, and most recently led the user growth and engagement at WeChat in the past 6 years until 2019. At WeChat, he managed a team of product managers and engineers to help scale WeChat from 300M to 1B users in China and around the world. </p><p><strong>Show Notes:</strong></p><p>2:15 Welcome Stephen Wang</p><p>2:50 How different WeChat is as a product from the western perspective</p><p>5:37 What makes WeChat instrumental for people’s life</p><p>12:42 Innovation inspired by Tencent team culture</p><p>16:10 Product design in China (Examples: Douban, Weibo and Xiaomi)</p><p>21:50 What makes China a special ecosystem for digital product development</p><p>25:30 WeChat’s killer features: WeChat payment, Red Packets, Mini program</p><p>32:35 Balance privacy protection and user growth</p><p>39:20 Skills needed for talents in Tencent</p><p>43:35 Are Chinese companies hiring more international talents</p><p>49:10 The major shift of product management philosophy in China</p><p>Many thanks to our guest Stephen Wang; host Oscar Ramos; producers Eva Shi and Sagar Chaudhary; editor David; organizer Chinaccelerator; and sponsor People Squared. Be sure to check out our website www.chinaccelerator.com</p><p>Share, subscribe, review, enjoy!</p><p>Follow us on LinkedIn: <strong>www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/</strong></p><p>Email us: <strong>team@chinastartuppulse.com</strong></p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>Scaling WeChat to One Billion Users Globally, with Stephen Wang, Former User Growth &amp; Engagement Director at WeChat</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Orbit Startups</itunes:author>
      <itunes:image href="https://image.simplecastcdn.com/images/f0ec2b13-bb5e-4311-b84c-7ccfee9698de/a681ead6-6d8b-4a42-8e50-19f9d9d9ddde/3000x3000/stephen-wang.jpg?aid=rss_feed"/>
      <itunes:duration>00:52:02</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>What has contributed to WeChat’s massive growth all over the world? What features make WeChat so instrumental for people’s life? 

Our guest today is Stephen Wang, who co-founded Rotten Tomatoes, a leading entertainment website focused on movie reviews and news, and most recently led the user growth and engagement at WeChat in the past 6 years until 2019. At WeChat, he managed a team of product managers and engineers to help scale WeChat from 300M to 1B users in China and around the world. 

In todays’s episode, Stephen will give us a deep dive into WeChat as a product and the mobile-only mentality behind it. As a product head in a product-centric company, Stephen shares the metric he cares the most. We will also take a look at the major shift of product management philosophy in China by using Bytedance as an example.</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>What has contributed to WeChat’s massive growth all over the world? What features make WeChat so instrumental for people’s life? 

Our guest today is Stephen Wang, who co-founded Rotten Tomatoes, a leading entertainment website focused on movie reviews and news, and most recently led the user growth and engagement at WeChat in the past 6 years until 2019. At WeChat, he managed a team of product managers and engineers to help scale WeChat from 300M to 1B users in China and around the world. 

In todays’s episode, Stephen will give us a deep dive into WeChat as a product and the mobile-only mentality behind it. As a product head in a product-centric company, Stephen shares the metric he cares the most. We will also take a look at the major shift of product management philosophy in China by using Bytedance as an example.</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>accelerator, product management, user engagement, wechat, growth hacking, rotten tomatoes, mini program, china, chinaccelerator, product manager, product, venture capital, wechat payment, mobile only, startups, entrepreneurs, tencent, data privacy, international talents, user growth, product design, product development</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:episode>135</itunes:episode>
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      <title>Evolution of Internet in China (1990s-2000s) and Staying Ahead of the Competition with Fritz Demopoulos, Co-founder of Qunar.com</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>Our guest for today, Fritz Demopoulos is the Founder of Queen's Road Capital. He has been an entrepreneur and investor within the media and internet industries for over 15 years. He co-founded Qunar.com, China’s largest travel internet company; and Shawei.com, China’s largest sports internet company. Fritz also had senior positions at Netease and The News Corporation. As an expat witnessing the exponential growth of China since the late 1990s, he brings a very unique and interesting perspective of internet in  China and the determinants of success for early internet founders.</p><p> </p><p><strong>Episode Notes:</strong></p><p>02:30 Introduction to Fritz Demopoulos</p><p>03:05 Internet in China in 1997</p><p>05:15 How Fritz decided to come to China</p><p>05:44 What stood out in the Chinese business environment</p><p>07:33 The Dotcom Bubble and its Impact on China</p><p>09:12 The Major Driver of Business Growth in China</p><p>12:13 The Evolution of Early Internet Businesses in China</p><p>13:42 Appetite for Monetization</p><p>17:00 Value Addition over Monetization</p><p>18:41 User Interface in early 2000s</p><p>21:36 The First Generation of Chinese Internet Founders</p><p>24:35 Fritz's leap into entrepreneurship</p><p>26:48 Differentiating a Business and Standing Out of the Crowd</p><p>31:03 Raising Capital as a Foreigner in China</p><p>32:58 Inflection Point for China Internet that Changed Everything</p><p>35:11 China's Role in Global Tech</p><p>39:04 What keeps Fritz busy now</p><p>40:00 Fritz's Investment Thesis and Areas of Investment Interest</p><p>41:30 How to contact Demopoulos</p><p>41:55 Advice to Everyone</p><p>Many thanks to our guest; host Oscar Ramos; producers Eva Shi and Sagar Chaudhary; editor David; organizer Chinaccelerator; and sponsor People Squared. Be sure to check out our website www.chinaccelerator.com</p><p>Share, subscribe, review, enjoy!</p><p>Follow us on LinkedIn: <strong>www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/</strong></p><p>Email us: <strong>team@chinastartuppulse.com</strong></p><p> </p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Tue, 2 Jun 2020 02:04:29 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Orbit Startups)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Our guest for today, Fritz Demopoulos is the Founder of Queen's Road Capital. He has been an entrepreneur and investor within the media and internet industries for over 15 years. He co-founded Qunar.com, China’s largest travel internet company; and Shawei.com, China’s largest sports internet company. Fritz also had senior positions at Netease and The News Corporation. As an expat witnessing the exponential growth of China since the late 1990s, he brings a very unique and interesting perspective of internet in  China and the determinants of success for early internet founders.</p><p> </p><p><strong>Episode Notes:</strong></p><p>02:30 Introduction to Fritz Demopoulos</p><p>03:05 Internet in China in 1997</p><p>05:15 How Fritz decided to come to China</p><p>05:44 What stood out in the Chinese business environment</p><p>07:33 The Dotcom Bubble and its Impact on China</p><p>09:12 The Major Driver of Business Growth in China</p><p>12:13 The Evolution of Early Internet Businesses in China</p><p>13:42 Appetite for Monetization</p><p>17:00 Value Addition over Monetization</p><p>18:41 User Interface in early 2000s</p><p>21:36 The First Generation of Chinese Internet Founders</p><p>24:35 Fritz's leap into entrepreneurship</p><p>26:48 Differentiating a Business and Standing Out of the Crowd</p><p>31:03 Raising Capital as a Foreigner in China</p><p>32:58 Inflection Point for China Internet that Changed Everything</p><p>35:11 China's Role in Global Tech</p><p>39:04 What keeps Fritz busy now</p><p>40:00 Fritz's Investment Thesis and Areas of Investment Interest</p><p>41:30 How to contact Demopoulos</p><p>41:55 Advice to Everyone</p><p>Many thanks to our guest; host Oscar Ramos; producers Eva Shi and Sagar Chaudhary; editor David; organizer Chinaccelerator; and sponsor People Squared. Be sure to check out our website www.chinaccelerator.com</p><p>Share, subscribe, review, enjoy!</p><p>Follow us on LinkedIn: <strong>www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/</strong></p><p>Email us: <strong>team@chinastartuppulse.com</strong></p><p> </p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>Evolution of Internet in China (1990s-2000s) and Staying Ahead of the Competition with Fritz Demopoulos, Co-founder of Qunar.com</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Orbit Startups</itunes:author>
      <itunes:image href="https://image.simplecastcdn.com/images/f0ec2b13-bb5e-4311-b84c-7ccfee9698de/e9d8e429-5210-4542-b155-7dd8f18c9793/3000x3000/fritz-demopoulos.jpg?aid=rss_feed"/>
      <itunes:duration>00:43:52</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>With China having the highest number of internet users in the world with more than 750 million users, it is hard to imagine a time when there were only a few hundred users. 

Fortunately, we do not have to leave much to the imagination.  Our guest for today, Demopoulos, has witnessed firsthand the rapid rise of internet development and adoption in China.

Before the dotcom bubble of the early 2000s and well before China became the dominant internet economy it is today, Fritz came to China and is one of a handful of experts, who has not only led multinational businesses but also established successful businesses of his own. Fritz Demopoulos has been an entrepreneur and investor in the media and internet industry for over 15 years. He co-founded and exited Qunar.com, China’s largest travel internet company; and Shawei.com, China’s largest sports internet company. Fritz has also held senior positions at Neteast and The News Corporation. 

In today’s episode, Fritz dives deep into the early days of the internet in China. He shares his experience working in the media industry in China in the early days when people were still figuring out what the internet was. We also discuss the first-generation of internet entrepreneurs in China: how they started, what made them different, and more. We then move onto his own entrepreneurial journey in China. Starting a business in China as a foreigner is not easy, let alone a successful one. Fritz talks about how he managed to build his business in China by staying ahead of the curve, something that all entrepreneurs can learn from. </itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>With China having the highest number of internet users in the world with more than 750 million users, it is hard to imagine a time when there were only a few hundred users. 

Fortunately, we do not have to leave much to the imagination.  Our guest for today, Demopoulos, has witnessed firsthand the rapid rise of internet development and adoption in China.

Before the dotcom bubble of the early 2000s and well before China became the dominant internet economy it is today, Fritz came to China and is one of a handful of experts, who has not only led multinational businesses but also established successful businesses of his own. Fritz Demopoulos has been an entrepreneur and investor in the media and internet industry for over 15 years. He co-founded and exited Qunar.com, China’s largest travel internet company; and Shawei.com, China’s largest sports internet company. Fritz has also held senior positions at Neteast and The News Corporation. 

In today’s episode, Fritz dives deep into the early days of the internet in China. He shares his experience working in the media industry in China in the early days when people were still figuring out what the internet was. We also discuss the first-generation of internet entrepreneurs in China: how they started, what made them different, and more. We then move onto his own entrepreneurial journey in China. Starting a business in China as a foreigner is not easy, let alone a successful one. Fritz talks about how he managed to build his business in China by staying ahead of the curve, something that all entrepreneurs can learn from. </itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>accelerator, china internet, alibaba, investor, netease, vc, fundraising, china, founder, chinaccelerator, qunar, technology, sina, startup, venture capital, internet in china, tencent, internet, shawei.com</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:episode>134</itunes:episode>
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      <title>Building from Zero for Government, Venture Capital and Tech Startups; and Lessons from Storeroom to Super App: 8x8 Global Speaker Series (3/3) with Yaw Yeo and Cheryl Goh</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>Today we’re bringing you the final episode of our Chinaccelerator 8x8 Global Speakers Series where we invite some of the most accomplished members of the China startup ecosystem to share key lessons for startups in eight minutes or less. </p><p>Our theme for this episode is entrepreneurship insights. Our two speakers today bring with them a plethora of experience to share with our listeners. Stay tuned for the insights from Yaw Yeo and Cheryl Goh.</p><p>[01:51] Yaw Yeo</p><p>[17:30] Cheryl Goh</p><p><strong>Yaw Yeo</strong> is the General Manager for International Product and Business for Alibaba Cloud. Prior to Alibaba, Yaw was responsible for new market expansion in the Asia-Pacific region for Twilio (NYSE:TWLO). Yaw started working with Twilio as an investor in 2012. He joined Twilio as employee #1 in Asia-Pacific in 2014 and witnessed Twilio’s growth from a startup of 50 employees to a publicly-traded company of 2,500 employees.</p><p><strong>Cheryl Goh </strong>is part of the  founding team at Grab. Starting in Kuala Lumpur as a one-man marketing team, she has set up the marketing practise across Southeast Asia for Grab over the last six years. Today, she leads marketing in over 300 cities, covering all of Grab’s business verticals including transport, food, payments and logistics. She oversees Grab’s marketing efforts across the region, leading a team of over 500 marketers across Southeast Asia. In 6 years, Cheryl has built the Grab brand into a household name across Southeast Asia, and played a critical role in the company’s growth and progression from ride-hailing, into the region’s leading superapp. Under her leadership, the marketing team has led the development of demand shaping platforms which drives Grab’s growth using technology and automation. She also manages Grab’s social impact programme and published Grab’s first social impact report earlier this year.</p><p>Many thanks to our guests; host Oscar Ramos; producers Eva Shi and Sagar Chaudhary; editor David; organizer Chinaccelerator; and sponsor People Squared. Be sure to check out our website www.chinaccelerator.com</p><p>Share, subscribe, review, enjoy!</p><p>Follow us on LinkedIn: <strong>www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/</strong></p><p>Email us: <strong>team@chinastartuppulse.com</strong></p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Sat, 23 May 2020 01:00:07 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Orbit Startups)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Today we’re bringing you the final episode of our Chinaccelerator 8x8 Global Speakers Series where we invite some of the most accomplished members of the China startup ecosystem to share key lessons for startups in eight minutes or less. </p><p>Our theme for this episode is entrepreneurship insights. Our two speakers today bring with them a plethora of experience to share with our listeners. Stay tuned for the insights from Yaw Yeo and Cheryl Goh.</p><p>[01:51] Yaw Yeo</p><p>[17:30] Cheryl Goh</p><p><strong>Yaw Yeo</strong> is the General Manager for International Product and Business for Alibaba Cloud. Prior to Alibaba, Yaw was responsible for new market expansion in the Asia-Pacific region for Twilio (NYSE:TWLO). Yaw started working with Twilio as an investor in 2012. He joined Twilio as employee #1 in Asia-Pacific in 2014 and witnessed Twilio’s growth from a startup of 50 employees to a publicly-traded company of 2,500 employees.</p><p><strong>Cheryl Goh </strong>is part of the  founding team at Grab. Starting in Kuala Lumpur as a one-man marketing team, she has set up the marketing practise across Southeast Asia for Grab over the last six years. Today, she leads marketing in over 300 cities, covering all of Grab’s business verticals including transport, food, payments and logistics. She oversees Grab’s marketing efforts across the region, leading a team of over 500 marketers across Southeast Asia. In 6 years, Cheryl has built the Grab brand into a household name across Southeast Asia, and played a critical role in the company’s growth and progression from ride-hailing, into the region’s leading superapp. Under her leadership, the marketing team has led the development of demand shaping platforms which drives Grab’s growth using technology and automation. She also manages Grab’s social impact programme and published Grab’s first social impact report earlier this year.</p><p>Many thanks to our guests; host Oscar Ramos; producers Eva Shi and Sagar Chaudhary; editor David; organizer Chinaccelerator; and sponsor People Squared. Be sure to check out our website www.chinaccelerator.com</p><p>Share, subscribe, review, enjoy!</p><p>Follow us on LinkedIn: <strong>www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/</strong></p><p>Email us: <strong>team@chinastartuppulse.com</strong></p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>Building from Zero for Government, Venture Capital and Tech Startups; and Lessons from Storeroom to Super App: 8x8 Global Speaker Series (3/3) with Yaw Yeo and Cheryl Goh</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Orbit Startups</itunes:author>
      <itunes:duration>00:29:35</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>Today we’re bringing you the final episode of our Chinaccelerator 8x8 Global Speakers Series where we invite some of the most accomplished members of the China startup ecosystem to share key lessons for startups in eight minutes or less. 

Our theme for this episode is entrepreneurship insights. Our two speakers today bring with them a plethora of experience to share with our listeners. Stay tuned for the insights from Yaw Yeo and Cheryl Goh.
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      <itunes:subtitle>Today we’re bringing you the final episode of our Chinaccelerator 8x8 Global Speakers Series where we invite some of the most accomplished members of the China startup ecosystem to share key lessons for startups in eight minutes or less. 

Our theme for this episode is entrepreneurship insights. Our two speakers today bring with them a plethora of experience to share with our listeners. Stay tuned for the insights from Yaw Yeo and Cheryl Goh.
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      <description><![CDATA[<p>This is the second episode from our Chinaccelerator 8X8 Global Speakers Series, where we bring 8 influential speakers to share their insights and experiences in 8 minutes. We have some great speakers lined up for this episode.</p><p>[02:50] Patrick Lee</p><p>[11:48]  Fritz Demopoulos</p><p>[21:54] Patrick Riley</p><p>Patrick Lee is a serial entrepreneur best known for being a co-founder and former CEO of Rotten Tomatoes (rottentomatoes.com), a leading entertainment website focused on movie reviews and news. He is an advisor to a number of startups including Casetify, ChargeSPOT, Instaread, Kiwibot, Oishii, WePloy, and Zeuss Technologies; and a mentor at a number of organizations including SOSV, Berkeley SkyDeck, Blue Startups, and Founder Institute.</p><p>Fritz Demopoulos has been an entrepreneur and investor within the media and internet industries for over 15 years. He co-founded Qunar.com, China’s largest travel internet company; and Shawei.com, China’s largest sports internet company. Fritz also had senior positions at Netease and The News Corporation</p><p>Patrick Riley is the CEO at GAN and Managing Partner and Co-Founder of GAN Ventures, a seed-stage venture capital fund. Most recently, he was on the executive team at Techstars, where he oversaw its business development. He started his career working for W.L. Gore and Associates and moved into the leadership of the American Red Cross in Washington, D.C. Patrick left the Red Cross to manage the West Coast sales and operations for a venture-backed healthcare company that had an exit before joining Techstars and GAN.</p><p>Many thanks to our guests; host Oscar Ramos; producers Eva Shi and Sagar Chaudhary; editor David; organizer Chinaccelerator; and sponsor People Squared. Be sure to check out our website <strong>www.chinaccelerator.com</strong></p><p>Share, subscribe, review, enjoy!</p><p>Follow us on Linkedin: <strong>www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/</strong></p><p>Email us: <strong>team@chinastartuppulse.com</strong></p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Sat, 16 May 2020 01:00:02 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Orbit Startups)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>This is the second episode from our Chinaccelerator 8X8 Global Speakers Series, where we bring 8 influential speakers to share their insights and experiences in 8 minutes. We have some great speakers lined up for this episode.</p><p>[02:50] Patrick Lee</p><p>[11:48]  Fritz Demopoulos</p><p>[21:54] Patrick Riley</p><p>Patrick Lee is a serial entrepreneur best known for being a co-founder and former CEO of Rotten Tomatoes (rottentomatoes.com), a leading entertainment website focused on movie reviews and news. He is an advisor to a number of startups including Casetify, ChargeSPOT, Instaread, Kiwibot, Oishii, WePloy, and Zeuss Technologies; and a mentor at a number of organizations including SOSV, Berkeley SkyDeck, Blue Startups, and Founder Institute.</p><p>Fritz Demopoulos has been an entrepreneur and investor within the media and internet industries for over 15 years. He co-founded Qunar.com, China’s largest travel internet company; and Shawei.com, China’s largest sports internet company. Fritz also had senior positions at Netease and The News Corporation</p><p>Patrick Riley is the CEO at GAN and Managing Partner and Co-Founder of GAN Ventures, a seed-stage venture capital fund. Most recently, he was on the executive team at Techstars, where he oversaw its business development. He started his career working for W.L. Gore and Associates and moved into the leadership of the American Red Cross in Washington, D.C. Patrick left the Red Cross to manage the West Coast sales and operations for a venture-backed healthcare company that had an exit before joining Techstars and GAN.</p><p>Many thanks to our guests; host Oscar Ramos; producers Eva Shi and Sagar Chaudhary; editor David; organizer Chinaccelerator; and sponsor People Squared. Be sure to check out our website <strong>www.chinaccelerator.com</strong></p><p>Share, subscribe, review, enjoy!</p><p>Follow us on Linkedin: <strong>www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/</strong></p><p>Email us: <strong>team@chinastartuppulse.com</strong></p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>Being Focused, The Inspiration for Business Ideas, Why Mental Health Matters for Founders; 8x8 Global Speakers Series (2/3) with Patrick Lee, Fritz Demopoulos, and Patrick Riley</itunes:title>
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      <itunes:summary>This is the second episode from our Chinaccelerator 8X8 Global Speakers Series, where we bring 8 influential speakers to share their insights and experiences in 8 minutes. We have some great speakers lined up for this episode. 
</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>This is the second episode from our Chinaccelerator 8X8 Global Speakers Series, where we bring 8 influential speakers to share their insights and experiences in 8 minutes. We have some great speakers lined up for this episode. 
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      <title>Fundraising during COVID-19: Dos and Don’ts, Transforming Crisis into Opportunity with Design, and How to Survive COVID-19 as a Travel Company; 8x8 Global Speakers Series (1/3) with Edith Yeung, Yiying Lu and Abel Zhao</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>Welcome everybody to another episode of the China Startup Pulse. We have a special one today. We are back with our <strong>Chinaccelerator 8x8 Speaker Series</strong> this year with eight influential speakers from all over the world to share their insights for startups in eight minutes.</p><p>In this week’s episode, our speakers will share their experience and insights as to how startups can weather through the storm that is the Coronavirus pandemic. Our three guests bring different perspectives given their diverse backgrounds.</p><p>[02:13] Edith Yeung</p><p>[11:47]   Yiying Lu</p><p>[18:36] Abel Zhao</p><p>Edith Yeung is a General Partner at Proof of Capital and advisor to 500 Startups. Previously, she was the GM at Dolphin Browser where she helped the company grow from 0 to 150 million app downloads. She has also led operation roles at several Fortune 500 companies.</p><p>Yiying Lu is one of the 100 Most Creative People in Business by Fast Company. She is the artist behind the globally celebrated Twitter Fail Whale and the dumpling emoji. She has worked with hundreds of tech startups and entrepreneurs around the world, sharing her experiences and educating them about creative innovation.</p><p>Abel Zhao is the co-founder and CEO of TravelFlan, an award-winning AI and big data solutions company, empowering Fortune 500 companies including Samsung and China Mobile. </p><p>Many thanks to our guests; host Oscar Ramos; producers Eva Shi and Sagar Chaudhary; editor David; organizer Chinaccelerator; and sponsor People Squared. Be sure to check out our website <strong>www.chinaccelerator.com</strong></p><p>Share, subscribe, review, enjoy!</p><p>Follow us on Linkedin: <strong>www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/</strong></p><p>Email us: <strong>team@chinastartuppulse.com</strong></p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Fri, 8 May 2020 03:00:06 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Yiying Lu, Abel Zhao, Edith Yeung, Oscar Ramos)</author>
      <link>https://www.chinastartuppulse.com/combating-covid-19</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Welcome everybody to another episode of the China Startup Pulse. We have a special one today. We are back with our <strong>Chinaccelerator 8x8 Speaker Series</strong> this year with eight influential speakers from all over the world to share their insights for startups in eight minutes.</p><p>In this week’s episode, our speakers will share their experience and insights as to how startups can weather through the storm that is the Coronavirus pandemic. Our three guests bring different perspectives given their diverse backgrounds.</p><p>[02:13] Edith Yeung</p><p>[11:47]   Yiying Lu</p><p>[18:36] Abel Zhao</p><p>Edith Yeung is a General Partner at Proof of Capital and advisor to 500 Startups. Previously, she was the GM at Dolphin Browser where she helped the company grow from 0 to 150 million app downloads. She has also led operation roles at several Fortune 500 companies.</p><p>Yiying Lu is one of the 100 Most Creative People in Business by Fast Company. She is the artist behind the globally celebrated Twitter Fail Whale and the dumpling emoji. She has worked with hundreds of tech startups and entrepreneurs around the world, sharing her experiences and educating them about creative innovation.</p><p>Abel Zhao is the co-founder and CEO of TravelFlan, an award-winning AI and big data solutions company, empowering Fortune 500 companies including Samsung and China Mobile. </p><p>Many thanks to our guests; host Oscar Ramos; producers Eva Shi and Sagar Chaudhary; editor David; organizer Chinaccelerator; and sponsor People Squared. Be sure to check out our website <strong>www.chinaccelerator.com</strong></p><p>Share, subscribe, review, enjoy!</p><p>Follow us on Linkedin: <strong>www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/</strong></p><p>Email us: <strong>team@chinastartuppulse.com</strong></p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>Fundraising during COVID-19: Dos and Don’ts, Transforming Crisis into Opportunity with Design, and How to Survive COVID-19 as a Travel Company; 8x8 Global Speakers Series (1/3) with Edith Yeung, Yiying Lu and Abel Zhao</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Yiying Lu, Abel Zhao, Edith Yeung, Oscar Ramos</itunes:author>
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      <itunes:summary>Welcome everybody to another episode of the China Startup Pulse. We have a special one today. We are back with our Chinaccelerator 8x8 Speaker Series with eight influential speakers from all over the world to share their insights for startups in eight minutes. 

In this week’s episode, our speakers will share their experience and insights as to how startups can weather through the storm that is the Coronavirus pandemic. Our three guests bring different perspectives drawing from their diverse backgrounds.
</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>Welcome everybody to another episode of the China Startup Pulse. We have a special one today. We are back with our Chinaccelerator 8x8 Speaker Series with eight influential speakers from all over the world to share their insights for startups in eight minutes. 

In this week’s episode, our speakers will share their experience and insights as to how startups can weather through the storm that is the Coronavirus pandemic. Our three guests bring different perspectives drawing from their diverse backgrounds.
</itunes:subtitle>
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      <title>China’s Ambition on Electric Cars and The Brutal Competition, with Tu Le, Founder and Managing Director of Sino Auto Insights</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>Our guest for today, Tu Le is the founder and Managing Director of Sino Auto Insights, a Beijing-based business intelligence and advisory firm that specializes in helping mobility companies develop tech-focused and innovative products and services. With over 20 years of experience in the industry from pure automotive to pure tech and finally combine both experiences together in China, he has very interesting insider perspectives to share with us.</p><p><br />Episode notes:</p><p>02:03 Introduce Tu Le</p><p>03:04 Define Mobility</p><p>03:45 How mobility impacts other industries</p><p>05:20 How China becomes one of the largest markets for mobility</p><p>08:40 More adoption of electric motorcycles in China</p><p>12:54 The brutal battle between the traditional automakers and new technologies-powered EV brands</p><p>17:53 Xiaomi and Apple to join the competition</p><p>20:25 Will few leading players occupy the whole EV market in the end?</p><p>22:40 Tesla gets massive support from the Chinese government</p><p>24:55 Supply Chain for production</p><p>29:00 Startups that traditional automotive players like to work with</p><p>34:55 Opportunities to achieve profitability</p><p>37:30 Contact Tu Le</p><p>Many thanks to our guest Tu Le; host Oscar Ramos; producer Eva Shi; editor David; organizer Chinaccelerator; and sponsor People Squared. Be sure to check out our website <a href="http://www.chinaccelerator.com/">www.chinaccelerator.com</a></p><p>Share, subscribe, review, enjoy!</p><p>Follow us on Linkedin: <a href="http://www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/">www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/</a></p><p>Email us: <a href="mailto:team@chinastartuppulse.com">team@chinastartuppulse.com</a></p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Sat, 2 May 2020 01:00:01 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Orbit Startups)</author>
      <link>https://www.chinastartuppulse.com/electric-cars-tu-le</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Our guest for today, Tu Le is the founder and Managing Director of Sino Auto Insights, a Beijing-based business intelligence and advisory firm that specializes in helping mobility companies develop tech-focused and innovative products and services. With over 20 years of experience in the industry from pure automotive to pure tech and finally combine both experiences together in China, he has very interesting insider perspectives to share with us.</p><p><br />Episode notes:</p><p>02:03 Introduce Tu Le</p><p>03:04 Define Mobility</p><p>03:45 How mobility impacts other industries</p><p>05:20 How China becomes one of the largest markets for mobility</p><p>08:40 More adoption of electric motorcycles in China</p><p>12:54 The brutal battle between the traditional automakers and new technologies-powered EV brands</p><p>17:53 Xiaomi and Apple to join the competition</p><p>20:25 Will few leading players occupy the whole EV market in the end?</p><p>22:40 Tesla gets massive support from the Chinese government</p><p>24:55 Supply Chain for production</p><p>29:00 Startups that traditional automotive players like to work with</p><p>34:55 Opportunities to achieve profitability</p><p>37:30 Contact Tu Le</p><p>Many thanks to our guest Tu Le; host Oscar Ramos; producer Eva Shi; editor David; organizer Chinaccelerator; and sponsor People Squared. Be sure to check out our website <a href="http://www.chinaccelerator.com/">www.chinaccelerator.com</a></p><p>Share, subscribe, review, enjoy!</p><p>Follow us on Linkedin: <a href="http://www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/">www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/</a></p><p>Email us: <a href="mailto:team@chinastartuppulse.com">team@chinastartuppulse.com</a></p>
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      <itunes:title>China’s Ambition on Electric Cars and The Brutal Competition, with Tu Le, Founder and Managing Director of Sino Auto Insights</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Orbit Startups</itunes:author>
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      <itunes:summary>With 1.3 billion people, mobility is a massive challenge in china, not just about the intension between traditional petrol cars and new energy vehicles, but also delivery services and mid-volume logistics. What makes China as an early adopter in technology-focused mobility sectors, especially in Electric Vehicles (EVs)? What impacts the adoption of new energy vehicles (NEVs)? 

Our guest for today, Tu Le is the founder and Managing Director of Sino Auto Insights, a Beijing-based business intelligence and advisory firm that specializes in helping mobility companies develop tech-focused and innovative products and services. With over 20 years of experience in the industry from pure automotive to pure tech and finally combine both experiences together in China, he has very interesting insider perspectives to share with us.

During our discussions with Tu Le, we will take a look at how the government has focused on developing NEVs in the past 10 years, analyze the brutal competition between traditional automotive players and new technologies-powered EV brands. We also want to remind everyone that there’s another party who is joining this battle - big tech giants like Apple and Xiaomi. In the end, we shed the spotlight on startups by discussing the new opportunities.</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>With 1.3 billion people, mobility is a massive challenge in china, not just about the intension between traditional petrol cars and new energy vehicles, but also delivery services and mid-volume logistics. What makes China as an early adopter in technology-focused mobility sectors, especially in Electric Vehicles (EVs)? What impacts the adoption of new energy vehicles (NEVs)? 

Our guest for today, Tu Le is the founder and Managing Director of Sino Auto Insights, a Beijing-based business intelligence and advisory firm that specializes in helping mobility companies develop tech-focused and innovative products and services. With over 20 years of experience in the industry from pure automotive to pure tech and finally combine both experiences together in China, he has very interesting insider perspectives to share with us.

During our discussions with Tu Le, we will take a look at how the government has focused on developing NEVs in the past 10 years, analyze the brutal competition between traditional automotive players and new technologies-powered EV brands. We also want to remind everyone that there’s another party who is joining this battle - big tech giants like Apple and Xiaomi. In the end, we shed the spotlight on startups by discussing the new opportunities.</itunes:subtitle>
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      <title>How China Regulates Internet Economy and New Technologies with Sam Cai, Internet Legal and Policy Expert</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>Today’s guest Sam Cai is a legal and policy expert in Internet-related legislation, intellectual property rights and WTO rules, involved in different Chinese and international institutions. Currently he acts as Deputy Director and Chief Researcher of Cyberlaw Center at one of the largest tech companies in China.</p><p>Episodes Notes:</p><p>02:00 Introduce Sam Cai</p><p>02:45 What is Prism Think Tank</p><p>03:20 How China Internet regulations have evolved</p><p>04:53 Three approaches to regulate new technologies</p><p>08:02 Why China takes a relatively open approach for new things</p><p>09:47 What is “Internet +”</p><p>12:00 Are regulations different for foreigners and local players</p><p>13:30 Regulated cases in e-commerce</p><p>15:30 Legal and policy issues around data privacy and Artificial Intelligence</p><p>19:04 GDPR’s impact on the industry globally</p><p>23:15 Opportunities for foreign companies</p><p>24:35 The game app Plague Inc was forbidden during COVID19</p><p>26:30 A license-based regulation model</p><p>29:10 Future regulations and policies in Europe, the US and China</p><p>20:15 New government plan in China - “New Infrastructure”</p><p>31:00 The role of regulations in the internationalization of Chinese companies</p><p>31:56 Suggestions for foreign companies coming to China</p><p>34:34 How to contact Sam</p><p>Many thanks to our guest Sam Cai; host Oscar Ramos; producer Eva Shi; editors David; organizer Chinaccelerator; and sponsors People Squared. Be sure to check out our website <a href="http://www.chinaccelerator.com/">www.chinaccelerator.com</a></p><p>Share, subscribe, review, enjoy!</p><p>Follow us on Linkedin: <a href="http://www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/">www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/</a></p><p>Email us: <a href="mailto:team@chinastartuppulse.com">team@chinastartuppulse.com</a></p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Fri, 24 Apr 2020 04:09:24 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Chinaccelerator)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Today’s guest Sam Cai is a legal and policy expert in Internet-related legislation, intellectual property rights and WTO rules, involved in different Chinese and international institutions. Currently he acts as Deputy Director and Chief Researcher of Cyberlaw Center at one of the largest tech companies in China.</p><p>Episodes Notes:</p><p>02:00 Introduce Sam Cai</p><p>02:45 What is Prism Think Tank</p><p>03:20 How China Internet regulations have evolved</p><p>04:53 Three approaches to regulate new technologies</p><p>08:02 Why China takes a relatively open approach for new things</p><p>09:47 What is “Internet +”</p><p>12:00 Are regulations different for foreigners and local players</p><p>13:30 Regulated cases in e-commerce</p><p>15:30 Legal and policy issues around data privacy and Artificial Intelligence</p><p>19:04 GDPR’s impact on the industry globally</p><p>23:15 Opportunities for foreign companies</p><p>24:35 The game app Plague Inc was forbidden during COVID19</p><p>26:30 A license-based regulation model</p><p>29:10 Future regulations and policies in Europe, the US and China</p><p>20:15 New government plan in China - “New Infrastructure”</p><p>31:00 The role of regulations in the internationalization of Chinese companies</p><p>31:56 Suggestions for foreign companies coming to China</p><p>34:34 How to contact Sam</p><p>Many thanks to our guest Sam Cai; host Oscar Ramos; producer Eva Shi; editors David; organizer Chinaccelerator; and sponsors People Squared. Be sure to check out our website <a href="http://www.chinaccelerator.com/">www.chinaccelerator.com</a></p><p>Share, subscribe, review, enjoy!</p><p>Follow us on Linkedin: <a href="http://www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/">www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/</a></p><p>Email us: <a href="mailto:team@chinastartuppulse.com">team@chinastartuppulse.com</a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>How China Regulates Internet Economy and New Technologies with Sam Cai, Internet Legal and Policy Expert</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Chinaccelerator</itunes:author>
      <itunes:image href="https://image.simplecastcdn.com/images/f0ec2b13-bb5e-4311-b84c-7ccfee9698de/1689164e-0bb2-4702-a2f9-4095880094da/3000x3000/sam-cai.jpg?aid=rss_feed"/>
      <itunes:duration>00:36:04</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>Cyberspace has been regulated rapidly everywhere. China is constantly used as a reference. How does China create its Cyberlaw regulatory framework? Are these regulations conservative or forward-looking? Are regulations promoting or slowing down Innovation? 

Today’s guest Sam Cai is a legal and policy expert in Internet-related legislation, intellectual property rights and WTO rules, involved in different Chinese and international institutions. Currently he acts as Deputy Director and Chief Researcher of Cyberlaw Center at one of the largest tech companies in China.

Sam gave us a big picture of China’s Internet regulations by digging deep into the approaches, limits, and opportunities. The reality is that a lot of International people still believed that a &quot;Chinese partner&quot; is necessary to run business in China while Sam shared that “they are just not aware of the open opportunities”. He also clarified the differences for foreigners and local players from the policy perspective. In the end, he explained the transition from the “Internet +” to the new Internet government plan “New Infrastructure”.</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>Cyberspace has been regulated rapidly everywhere. China is constantly used as a reference. How does China create its Cyberlaw regulatory framework? Are these regulations conservative or forward-looking? Are regulations promoting or slowing down Innovation? 

Today’s guest Sam Cai is a legal and policy expert in Internet-related legislation, intellectual property rights and WTO rules, involved in different Chinese and international institutions. Currently he acts as Deputy Director and Chief Researcher of Cyberlaw Center at one of the largest tech companies in China.

Sam gave us a big picture of China’s Internet regulations by digging deep into the approaches, limits, and opportunities. The reality is that a lot of International people still believed that a &quot;Chinese partner&quot; is necessary to run business in China while Sam shared that “they are just not aware of the open opportunities”. He also clarified the differences for foreigners and local players from the policy perspective. In the end, he explained the transition from the “Internet +” to the new Internet government plan “New Infrastructure”.</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>accelerator, legislation, china cyber law, artificial intelligence, internet law, china internet law, china, gdpr, policy, internationalization, games, legal, ai, joint ventures, ip, venture capital, new infrastructure, innovation, regulations, internet +, intellectual property, cyberlaw, data privacy, ecommerce</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:episode>129</itunes:episode>
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      <title>Unveil Impact Investing Under COVID-19, with Paul Meyers, Asian Digital Veteran and Investor</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>01:50 Impact investing in emerging markets</p><p>04:20 How COVID-19 impacts the impact investing</p><p>09:48 How COVID-19 impact entrepreneurs to adjust their business</p><p>12:30 How startups can get the attention from impact investors</p><p>15:48 SE Asian startups tend to solve their local Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) problems first</p><p>16:53 Impact investing from China to Southeast Asia</p><p>18:31 What startups deliver social impact</p><p>20:51 Asian organizations with a global vision of gender equality</p><p>23:00 What encourages the changes for female entrepreneurs</p><p>26:25 How to contact Paul Meyers</p><p>*About Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs):</p><p>“The SDGs, as they’re known, set quantitative and qualitative targets and delivery timelines for impact-focused action through 2030. From eradicating poverty (Goal 1) to ensuring the availability and management of clean water access (Goal 6) to combatting climate change (Goal 13) and others." (Paul Meyers)</p><p>Many thanks to our host Oscar Ramos; our guest Paul Meyers; producer Eva Shi; editors David; organizer Chinaccelerator; and sponsors People Squared. Be sure to check out our website <a href="http://www.chinaccelerator.com/">www.chinaccelerator.com</a></p><p>Share, subscribe, review, enjoy!</p><p>Follow us on Linkedin: <a href="http://www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/">www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/</a></p><p>Email us: <a href="mailto:team@chinastartuppulse.com">team@chinastartuppulse.com</a></p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Fri, 17 Apr 2020 02:43:32 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Chinaccelerator)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>01:50 Impact investing in emerging markets</p><p>04:20 How COVID-19 impacts the impact investing</p><p>09:48 How COVID-19 impact entrepreneurs to adjust their business</p><p>12:30 How startups can get the attention from impact investors</p><p>15:48 SE Asian startups tend to solve their local Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) problems first</p><p>16:53 Impact investing from China to Southeast Asia</p><p>18:31 What startups deliver social impact</p><p>20:51 Asian organizations with a global vision of gender equality</p><p>23:00 What encourages the changes for female entrepreneurs</p><p>26:25 How to contact Paul Meyers</p><p>*About Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs):</p><p>“The SDGs, as they’re known, set quantitative and qualitative targets and delivery timelines for impact-focused action through 2030. From eradicating poverty (Goal 1) to ensuring the availability and management of clean water access (Goal 6) to combatting climate change (Goal 13) and others." (Paul Meyers)</p><p>Many thanks to our host Oscar Ramos; our guest Paul Meyers; producer Eva Shi; editors David; organizer Chinaccelerator; and sponsors People Squared. Be sure to check out our website <a href="http://www.chinaccelerator.com/">www.chinaccelerator.com</a></p><p>Share, subscribe, review, enjoy!</p><p>Follow us on Linkedin: <a href="http://www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/">www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/</a></p><p>Email us: <a href="mailto:team@chinastartuppulse.com">team@chinastartuppulse.com</a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>Unveil Impact Investing Under COVID-19, with Paul Meyers, Asian Digital Veteran and Investor</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Chinaccelerator</itunes:author>
      <itunes:image href="https://image.simplecastcdn.com/images/f0ec2b13-bb5e-4311-b84c-7ccfee9698de/d8d63acb-47a6-4123-ad65-3e90a27c4738/3000x3000/paul-meyers.jpg?aid=rss_feed"/>
      <itunes:duration>00:28:55</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>The general public is increasingly becoming more aware of the value of sustainability. How is the investment world reacting to that? Impact investing - investment that generates positive social or environmental impact alongside financial returns.

Today, we have a great conversation about impact investing with Paul Meyers, an Asian digital veteran with over 25 years of experience, who helped set up ADBVentures, the Asian Development Bank’s first emerging market impact fund.

Paul explains what impact investing specifically means in emerging markets and extend the conversation to how the current COVID-19 outbreak will make a difference. He also introduces startup cases to illustrate what impact investors are looking at when making decisions.</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>The general public is increasingly becoming more aware of the value of sustainability. How is the investment world reacting to that? Impact investing - investment that generates positive social or environmental impact alongside financial returns.

Today, we have a great conversation about impact investing with Paul Meyers, an Asian digital veteran with over 25 years of experience, who helped set up ADBVentures, the Asian Development Bank’s first emerging market impact fund.

Paul explains what impact investing specifically means in emerging markets and extend the conversation to how the current COVID-19 outbreak will make a difference. He also introduces startup cases to illustrate what impact investors are looking at when making decisions.</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>accelerator, tech for good, coronavirus, china startup pulse, sdg, water equality, gender equality, china, social impact, southeast asia, chinaccelerator, social equality, impact investing, sustainbility, venture capital, healthcare equality, female founders, paul meyers, emerging markets, startups, female entrepreneur, adbventures, entrepreneurs, covid-19, education equliaty, investment, environment protection, sustainable development goals</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:episode>128</itunes:episode>
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      <title>Investing in Risks with Peter Mao, Co-founder of Panda Capital</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>01:46 Introduce Peter Mao</p><p>03:11 Introduce Panda Capital</p><p>05:35 The geographic focus for investment</p><p>06:17 How to react to the current downturn</p><p>07:49 Is it now a bad timing for deep technology companies?</p><p>11:07 The industries that can thrive from the COVID-19 crisis</p><p>12:51 The risky companies to invest</p><p>14:22 Three types of companies that are risky but full of opportunities</p><p>19:17 Are Chinese VCs looking for more obvious winners?</p><p>22:21 How to evaluate risks</p><p>25:30 How Peter evaluates founders and teams</p><p>27:20 The business metrics Peter care about</p><p>30:00 Deal breakers for Series A companies</p><p>35:50 Why Panda Capital has a different investment strategy</p><p>41:05 How to contact Peter</p><p>Many thanks to our host Oscar Ramos; our guest Peter Mao; producer Eva Shi; editors David; organizer Chinaccelerator; and sponsors People Squared. Be sure to check out our website <a href="http://www.chinaccelerator.com/">www.chinaccelerator.com</a></p><p>Share, subscribe, review, enjoy!</p><p>Follow us on Linkedin: <a href="http://www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/">www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/</a></p><p>Email us: <a href="mailto:team@chinastartuppulse.com">team@chinastartuppulse.com</a></p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Tue, 7 Apr 2020 01:00:10 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Chinaccelerator)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>01:46 Introduce Peter Mao</p><p>03:11 Introduce Panda Capital</p><p>05:35 The geographic focus for investment</p><p>06:17 How to react to the current downturn</p><p>07:49 Is it now a bad timing for deep technology companies?</p><p>11:07 The industries that can thrive from the COVID-19 crisis</p><p>12:51 The risky companies to invest</p><p>14:22 Three types of companies that are risky but full of opportunities</p><p>19:17 Are Chinese VCs looking for more obvious winners?</p><p>22:21 How to evaluate risks</p><p>25:30 How Peter evaluates founders and teams</p><p>27:20 The business metrics Peter care about</p><p>30:00 Deal breakers for Series A companies</p><p>35:50 Why Panda Capital has a different investment strategy</p><p>41:05 How to contact Peter</p><p>Many thanks to our host Oscar Ramos; our guest Peter Mao; producer Eva Shi; editors David; organizer Chinaccelerator; and sponsors People Squared. Be sure to check out our website <a href="http://www.chinaccelerator.com/">www.chinaccelerator.com</a></p><p>Share, subscribe, review, enjoy!</p><p>Follow us on Linkedin: <a href="http://www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/">www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/</a></p><p>Email us: <a href="mailto:team@chinastartuppulse.com">team@chinastartuppulse.com</a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>Investing in Risks with Peter Mao, Co-founder of Panda Capital</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Chinaccelerator</itunes:author>
      <itunes:image href="https://image.simplecastcdn.com/images/f0ec2b13-bb5e-4311-b84c-7ccfee9698de/2ede0fcb-ad0e-44b7-8049-460ab5a4734f/3000x3000/wechatimg2496.jpg?aid=rss_feed"/>
      <itunes:duration>00:41:00</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>Venture Capital is about venture and investing in startups that are doing something that has never been done. Still, a lot of investors think more about the risks associated with new technologies and business models that potentially will work. 

Today’s guest clearly looks at the risky opportunities, not just as best for investment but the only ones worth considering. Peter Mao is Co-founder and Partner at Panda Capital. During his over 12-year experience in the venture capital firms, he has been part of the investment team behind companies like Xiaomi and more recently Mobike, a bike-sharing company where he led the Series B and eventually exited it at USD 2.7billion within just 18 months. 

In this episode, Peter will talk about Panda Capital’s three preferred risky areas for investment, their data-driven investment approach and how he evaluates both external factors (e.g. market) or internal ones (e.g. team) during the Due Diligence process. He will also share the most common deal breakers he saw in the past for Series A companies. </itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>Venture Capital is about venture and investing in startups that are doing something that has never been done. Still, a lot of investors think more about the risks associated with new technologies and business models that potentially will work. 

Today’s guest clearly looks at the risky opportunities, not just as best for investment but the only ones worth considering. Peter Mao is Co-founder and Partner at Panda Capital. During his over 12-year experience in the venture capital firms, he has been part of the investment team behind companies like Xiaomi and more recently Mobike, a bike-sharing company where he led the Series B and eventually exited it at USD 2.7billion within just 18 months. 

In this episode, Peter will talk about Panda Capital’s three preferred risky areas for investment, their data-driven investment approach and how he evaluates both external factors (e.g. market) or internal ones (e.g. team) during the Due Diligence process. He will also share the most common deal breakers he saw in the past for Series A companies. </itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>team, business model, risks, vc, red flags, venture capitalist, economic downturn, xiaomi, series a, data driven, due diligence, venture capital, marekt, investment thesis, investment strategy, qiming venture, covid-19, deal breakers, technologies, business metric, investment, panda capital, mobike, risky</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:episode>127</itunes:episode>
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      <title>How Snapask Started with a Facebook Page, with Founder Timothy Yu</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>02:26 Welcome Tim</p><p>03:08 What is Snapask</p><p>06:08 The tutorial market and how Snapask got started</p><p>06:27 Snapaks operates in 8 markets</p><p>07:00 How the COVID-19 impacts the remote education</p><p>08:10 The vision and the first version of Snapask</p><p>11:28 Finding the profiles of users</p><p>12:30 The stereotypes of asking questions in Asian culture</p><p>14:00 Targeting at parents or students?</p><p>20:00 The tutors on Snapask</p><p>25:00 Investors care about the supply-demand balance</p><p>29:00 What is the next for Snapask</p><p>31:30 How will COVID-19 impact the future of education</p><p>35:00 How to contact Timothy Yu</p><p>Many thanks to our host Oscar Ramos; our guest Timothy Yu; producer Eva Shi; editors David; organizer Chinaccelerator; and sponsors People Squared. Be sure to check out our website <a href="http://www.chinaccelerator.com/">www.chinaccelerator.com</a></p><p>Share, subscribe, review, enjoy!</p><p>Follow us on Linkedin: <a href="http://www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/">www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/</a></p><p>Email us: <a href="mailto:team@chinastartuppulse.com">team@chinastartuppulse.com</a></p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Mon, 30 Mar 2020 00:00:15 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Chinaccelerator)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>02:26 Welcome Tim</p><p>03:08 What is Snapask</p><p>06:08 The tutorial market and how Snapask got started</p><p>06:27 Snapaks operates in 8 markets</p><p>07:00 How the COVID-19 impacts the remote education</p><p>08:10 The vision and the first version of Snapask</p><p>11:28 Finding the profiles of users</p><p>12:30 The stereotypes of asking questions in Asian culture</p><p>14:00 Targeting at parents or students?</p><p>20:00 The tutors on Snapask</p><p>25:00 Investors care about the supply-demand balance</p><p>29:00 What is the next for Snapask</p><p>31:30 How will COVID-19 impact the future of education</p><p>35:00 How to contact Timothy Yu</p><p>Many thanks to our host Oscar Ramos; our guest Timothy Yu; producer Eva Shi; editors David; organizer Chinaccelerator; and sponsors People Squared. Be sure to check out our website <a href="http://www.chinaccelerator.com/">www.chinaccelerator.com</a></p><p>Share, subscribe, review, enjoy!</p><p>Follow us on Linkedin: <a href="http://www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/">www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/</a></p><p>Email us: <a href="mailto:team@chinastartuppulse.com">team@chinastartuppulse.com</a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>How Snapask Started with a Facebook Page, with Founder Timothy Yu</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Chinaccelerator</itunes:author>
      <itunes:image href="https://image.simplecastcdn.com/images/f0ec2b13-bb5e-4311-b84c-7ccfee9698de/1f5d3e63-d034-44b2-918d-534ecd00cc2f/3000x3000/wechatimg2497.jpg?aid=rss_feed"/>
      <itunes:duration>00:36:34</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>You don’t need to code to launch a unicorn startup. Through a non-code or low-code MVP (Minimum Viable Product), entrepreneurs can easily validate the assumptions, understand customers’ real pain points and test whether the business model will work or not. That simple lesson is ignored by many founders and is behind the failure of countless business initatives. Today’s guest Timothy Yu, founder and CEO of Snapask, an on-demand tutoring platform labeled as “Uber for Tutors” which just raised $35M in Series B, did not know about low fidelity prototyping. But he used the concept before he went through the SOSV Chinaccelerator’s Batch 8 program.

In today’s conversation, Tim will share how the company has grown from a simple Facebook page to an arising edtech company with over 100 employees, operating in 8 Asian markets and reaching almost 300million users. Tim will also give us a deep analysis on its two users - tutors and users and the data-driven strategies to acquire and retain both of them. Is technology shaping the future education industry? “How people can attain the ability of self-learning and apply them in life is going to be one of the most important skills in the future”, this is what Timothy believes and what Snapask is trying to offer.</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>You don’t need to code to launch a unicorn startup. Through a non-code or low-code MVP (Minimum Viable Product), entrepreneurs can easily validate the assumptions, understand customers’ real pain points and test whether the business model will work or not. That simple lesson is ignored by many founders and is behind the failure of countless business initatives. Today’s guest Timothy Yu, founder and CEO of Snapask, an on-demand tutoring platform labeled as “Uber for Tutors” which just raised $35M in Series B, did not know about low fidelity prototyping. But he used the concept before he went through the SOSV Chinaccelerator’s Batch 8 program.

In today’s conversation, Tim will share how the company has grown from a simple Facebook page to an arising edtech company with over 100 employees, operating in 8 Asian markets and reaching almost 300million users. Tim will also give us a deep analysis on its two users - tutors and users and the data-driven strategies to acquire and retain both of them. Is technology shaping the future education industry? “How people can attain the ability of self-learning and apply them in life is going to be one of the most important skills in the future”, this is what Timothy believes and what Snapask is trying to offer.</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>tutor, snapask, coronavirus, business model, customer acquisition, fundraising, southeast asia, online education, mvp, edtech, covid-19, asia, prototyping, remote working, minimum viable product, data-driven</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:episode>126</itunes:episode>
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      <title>Enabling Smart Cities: The Tech in the Driver&apos;s Seat with Bruce Bateman, Chief Technical Advisor at Lite-On Technology</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>02:13 Who is Bruce Bateman</p><p>09:54 Starting up in Asia is different from that in Silicon Valley</p><p>12:00 Design for manufacture and its challenges</p><p>14:30 The coronavirus outbreak is pushing forward the technologies</p><p>15:20 What will smart cities look like in the future</p><p>19:50 The cars industry is working on their intelligent innovation for smart cities</p><p>23:06 Transportation is one of the easiest problems to solve today</p><p>23:44 The education demands of different people</p><p>28:00 “The technology we are developing today will develop the smart city in the future”</p><p>29:34 The overhyped concept of “smart city”</p><p>35:00 How will technologies help to take care of old people</p><p>39:18 How to contact Bruce</p><p>Many thanks to our host Oscar Ramos; our guest Bruce Bateman; producer Eva Shi; editors David; organizer Chinaccelerator; and sponsors People Squared. Be sure to check out our website <a href="http://www.chinaccelerator.com/">www.chinaccelerator.com</a></p><p>Share, subscribe, review, enjoy!</p><p>Follow us on Linkedin: <a href="http://www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/">www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/</a></p><p>Email us: <a href="mailto:team@chinastartuppulse.com">team@chinastartuppulse.com</a></p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Wed, 18 Mar 2020 01:00:06 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Chinaccelerator)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>02:13 Who is Bruce Bateman</p><p>09:54 Starting up in Asia is different from that in Silicon Valley</p><p>12:00 Design for manufacture and its challenges</p><p>14:30 The coronavirus outbreak is pushing forward the technologies</p><p>15:20 What will smart cities look like in the future</p><p>19:50 The cars industry is working on their intelligent innovation for smart cities</p><p>23:06 Transportation is one of the easiest problems to solve today</p><p>23:44 The education demands of different people</p><p>28:00 “The technology we are developing today will develop the smart city in the future”</p><p>29:34 The overhyped concept of “smart city”</p><p>35:00 How will technologies help to take care of old people</p><p>39:18 How to contact Bruce</p><p>Many thanks to our host Oscar Ramos; our guest Bruce Bateman; producer Eva Shi; editors David; organizer Chinaccelerator; and sponsors People Squared. Be sure to check out our website <a href="http://www.chinaccelerator.com/">www.chinaccelerator.com</a></p><p>Share, subscribe, review, enjoy!</p><p>Follow us on Linkedin: <a href="http://www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/">www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/</a></p><p>Email us: <a href="mailto:team@chinastartuppulse.com">team@chinastartuppulse.com</a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
      <enclosure length="29566638" type="audio/mpeg" url="https://dts.podtrac.com/redirect.mp3/cdn.simplecast.com/audio/a0e035/a0e0352f-fcbe-4ea1-813c-f1a09496ed52/f4528825-07f9-4499-a7d9-4eeb10909654/csp-0126-brucebateman-mixed96_tc.mp3?aid=rss_feed&amp;feed=78I5oQc_"/>
      <itunes:title>Enabling Smart Cities: The Tech in the Driver&apos;s Seat with Bruce Bateman, Chief Technical Advisor at Lite-On Technology</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Chinaccelerator</itunes:author>
      <itunes:image href="https://image.simplecastcdn.com/images/f0ec2b13-bb5e-4311-b84c-7ccfee9698de/3954f189-8d0c-4327-af72-4c77c59cd2ab/3000x3000/wechatimg460.jpg?aid=rss_feed"/>
      <itunes:duration>00:41:04</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>Rapid urbanization and population concentration are challenges for many cities, especially in Asia’s fast-growing economies. Technology and data are helping to make our cities more efficient and sustainable. We are building smart cities, which integrate technologies to optimize every aspect that impacts every individual’s life, from waste management, utilities, transportation, education, food access and more.

Today’s guest Bruce Bateman is a technology veteran, a serial CEO and CTO, who has seen the technology from hardware to new media, or the most advanced networking protocols. He has been involved in the launch of nine startups. Today, he is leading the drive for Smart City technologies as Chief Technical Advisor at Lite-On Technology, a leading player in the smart city space. 

In this episode, Bruce will talk about how he helps city planners deploy the appropriate technologies to build smart cities, specifically in terms of transportation, education, and aging populations. Bruce will also share the role of technology and why solving real problems is something that really matters. “It won’t happen without involving people”, this is why Bruce is more willing to call them “smart communities” rather than “smart cities”. </itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>Rapid urbanization and population concentration are challenges for many cities, especially in Asia’s fast-growing economies. Technology and data are helping to make our cities more efficient and sustainable. We are building smart cities, which integrate technologies to optimize every aspect that impacts every individual’s life, from waste management, utilities, transportation, education, food access and more.

Today’s guest Bruce Bateman is a technology veteran, a serial CEO and CTO, who has seen the technology from hardware to new media, or the most advanced networking protocols. He has been involved in the launch of nine startups. Today, he is leading the drive for Smart City technologies as Chief Technical Advisor at Lite-On Technology, a leading player in the smart city space. 

In this episode, Bruce will talk about how he helps city planners deploy the appropriate technologies to build smart cities, specifically in terms of transportation, education, and aging populations. Bruce will also share the role of technology and why solving real problems is something that really matters. “It won’t happen without involving people”, this is why Bruce is more willing to call them “smart communities” rather than “smart cities”. </itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>accelerator, data, serial entrepreneur, aging, transportation, connected city, technology, venture capital, entrepreneur, education, mentor, hardware, startups, street lights, smart city, investment</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:episode>125</itunes:episode>
    </item>
    <item>
      <guid isPermaLink="false">c17999d3-391a-49f8-9237-5bb923303f9d</guid>
      <title>How to Recruit and Manage A Strong Startup Team with Lucas Englehardt, Serial Entrepreneur with Successful Exits</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>02:00 How Lucas got into food delivery in the early days</p><p>06:30 Customer acquisition for online service</p><p>08:50 Offline flyers was a weapon for Waimaichaorenn</p><p>11:20  How to increase the conversion rate of online and offline campaigns</p><p>18:40 Leading the team in China as a foreigner</p><p>22:10 How to attract the best talents</p><p>27:03 Motivate employees to work from offline to online during the virus outbreak</p><p>31:10 Lessons learnt after hiring someone who did not fit the team culture</p><p>36:04 What keeps Lucas busy now and what is xixilab</p><p>Many thanks to our host Oscar Ramos; our guest Lucas Englehardt; producer Eva Shi; editors David and Geep; organizer Chinaccelerator; and sponsors People Squared and Himalaya. Be sure to check out our website <a href="http://www.chinaccelerator.com/">www.chinaccelerator.com</a></p><p>Share, subscribe, review, enjoy!</p><p>Follow us on Linkedin: <a href="http://www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/">www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/</a></p><p>Email us: <a href="mailto:team@chinastartuppulse.com">team@chinastartuppulse.com</a></p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Tue, 10 Mar 2020 03:36:25 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Chinaccelerator)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>02:00 How Lucas got into food delivery in the early days</p><p>06:30 Customer acquisition for online service</p><p>08:50 Offline flyers was a weapon for Waimaichaorenn</p><p>11:20  How to increase the conversion rate of online and offline campaigns</p><p>18:40 Leading the team in China as a foreigner</p><p>22:10 How to attract the best talents</p><p>27:03 Motivate employees to work from offline to online during the virus outbreak</p><p>31:10 Lessons learnt after hiring someone who did not fit the team culture</p><p>36:04 What keeps Lucas busy now and what is xixilab</p><p>Many thanks to our host Oscar Ramos; our guest Lucas Englehardt; producer Eva Shi; editors David and Geep; organizer Chinaccelerator; and sponsors People Squared and Himalaya. Be sure to check out our website <a href="http://www.chinaccelerator.com/">www.chinaccelerator.com</a></p><p>Share, subscribe, review, enjoy!</p><p>Follow us on Linkedin: <a href="http://www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/">www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/</a></p><p>Email us: <a href="mailto:team@chinastartuppulse.com">team@chinastartuppulse.com</a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
      <enclosure length="28067994" type="audio/mpeg" url="https://dts.podtrac.com/redirect.mp3/cdn.simplecast.com/audio/a0e035/a0e0352f-fcbe-4ea1-813c-f1a09496ed52/0cd14856-0382-4f6c-a9fc-df33f30e2c95/csp-0125-lucasenglehardt-mixed96_tc.mp3?aid=rss_feed&amp;feed=78I5oQc_"/>
      <itunes:title>How to Recruit and Manage A Strong Startup Team with Lucas Englehardt, Serial Entrepreneur with Successful Exits</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Chinaccelerator</itunes:author>
      <itunes:image href="https://image.simplecastcdn.com/images/f0ec2b13-bb5e-4311-b84c-7ccfee9698de/0c4cbfb6-fe36-4c5b-9300-ad8d0066dcea/3000x3000/wechatimg2500.jpg?aid=rss_feed"/>
      <itunes:duration>00:38:59</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>There is no such a thing as a solo entrepreneur and the fast growth of startups requires strong teams to execute. Based on our experience, not having the right team is one of the top reasons why startups fail. This leads to the frequently asked questions: How to attract the right candidates? How to keep team morale high when things are not following the plan? And how to help talent develop to work efficiently?

Today we talk with serial entrepreneur Lucas Englehardt, who founded O2O food delivery startup Waimaichaoren in 2012. After successfully scaling the business to 18 cities, he finally exited the company to Delivery Hero in 2016. Having managed a company with 400 employees, Lucas will talk about his secrets in people management, especially for sales teams. Besides the best practices, he will also shared some of the hard learn lessons, such as hiring someone who did not fit in the team culture. 

As an early explorer in the food delivery space in China as a foreigner, Lucas also took us back to the early days when he just got into the industry and describe the creative strategies used to acquire clients. He will go deeper to explain how he found the need to change the team mindset about &quot;Experimentation&quot;, &quot;Copying&quot; and &quot;Failing fast”.</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>There is no such a thing as a solo entrepreneur and the fast growth of startups requires strong teams to execute. Based on our experience, not having the right team is one of the top reasons why startups fail. This leads to the frequently asked questions: How to attract the right candidates? How to keep team morale high when things are not following the plan? And how to help talent develop to work efficiently?

Today we talk with serial entrepreneur Lucas Englehardt, who founded O2O food delivery startup Waimaichaoren in 2012. After successfully scaling the business to 18 cities, he finally exited the company to Delivery Hero in 2016. Having managed a company with 400 employees, Lucas will talk about his secrets in people management, especially for sales teams. Besides the best practices, he will also shared some of the hard learn lessons, such as hiring someone who did not fit in the team culture. 

As an early explorer in the food delivery space in China as a foreigner, Lucas also took us back to the early days when he just got into the industry and describe the creative strategies used to acquire clients. He will go deeper to explain how he found the need to change the team mindset about &quot;Experimentation&quot;, &quot;Copying&quot; and &quot;Failing fast”.</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>team management, experiment, employee management, customer acquisition, sales, china, people management, hiring, startup, startups, working remotely, food delivery, team culture, o2o, talent, recruitment</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:episode>124</itunes:episode>
    </item>
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      <title>Gamification is Not Copying Games with Monte Singman, iDreamSky Technology</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>01:47 Welcome Monte to the podcast</p><p>02:13 How Monte got into gaming</p><p>04:01 Transition to business</p><p>06:30 What drove Monte to the US</p><p>09:30 Adoption of games in Asia</p><p>11:57  Drivers behind creating new games</p><p>16:15 Asian games focus more on functions</p><p>19:50 Playing video games is an easy way to fill in boredom</p><p>23:31 Challenges to implement gamification</p><p>25:03 “The core asset of gamification is fun”</p><p>27:15 Why kids like playing games rather than study</p><p>28:30 “Most gamification activities are superficial”</p><p>34:29 How to make the process pleasurable</p><p>36:50 Is VR a must-have for games?</p><p>41:11 The technology that will change the game industry</p><p>Many thanks to our host Oscar Ramos; our guest Monte Singman; producer Eva Shi; editors David and Geep; organizer Chinaccelerator; and sponsors People Squared and Himalaya. Be sure to check out our website <a href="http://www.chinaccelerator.com/">www.chinaccelerator.com</a></p><p>Share, subscribe, review, enjoy!</p><p>Follow us on Linkedin: <a href="http://www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/">www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/</a></p><p>Email us: <a href="mailto:team@chinastartuppulse.com">team@chinastartuppulse.com</a></p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Fri, 28 Feb 2020 04:21:34 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Orbit Startups)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>01:47 Welcome Monte to the podcast</p><p>02:13 How Monte got into gaming</p><p>04:01 Transition to business</p><p>06:30 What drove Monte to the US</p><p>09:30 Adoption of games in Asia</p><p>11:57  Drivers behind creating new games</p><p>16:15 Asian games focus more on functions</p><p>19:50 Playing video games is an easy way to fill in boredom</p><p>23:31 Challenges to implement gamification</p><p>25:03 “The core asset of gamification is fun”</p><p>27:15 Why kids like playing games rather than study</p><p>28:30 “Most gamification activities are superficial”</p><p>34:29 How to make the process pleasurable</p><p>36:50 Is VR a must-have for games?</p><p>41:11 The technology that will change the game industry</p><p>Many thanks to our host Oscar Ramos; our guest Monte Singman; producer Eva Shi; editors David and Geep; organizer Chinaccelerator; and sponsors People Squared and Himalaya. Be sure to check out our website <a href="http://www.chinaccelerator.com/">www.chinaccelerator.com</a></p><p>Share, subscribe, review, enjoy!</p><p>Follow us on Linkedin: <a href="http://www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/">www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/</a></p><p>Email us: <a href="mailto:team@chinastartuppulse.com">team@chinastartuppulse.com</a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
      <enclosure length="32342492" type="audio/mpeg" url="https://dts.podtrac.com/redirect.mp3/cdn.simplecast.com/audio/a0e035/a0e0352f-fcbe-4ea1-813c-f1a09496ed52/22229e9e-2282-4f41-9ec3-88700cbffc2f/csp-0124-montesingman-mixed96-fix_tc.mp3?aid=rss_feed&amp;feed=78I5oQc_"/>
      <itunes:title>Gamification is Not Copying Games with Monte Singman, iDreamSky Technology</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Orbit Startups</itunes:author>
      <itunes:image href="https://image.simplecastcdn.com/images/f0ec2b13-bb5e-4311-b84c-7ccfee9698de/f463ad7e-2dc0-42fa-8a19-e36d371b6792/3000x3000/wechatimg2501.jpg?aid=rss_feed"/>
      <itunes:duration>00:44:55</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>“Most of the gamification activities happening in the market are superficial” This is a statement from today’s guest Monte Singman, a game veteran with 33-year industry experience.

So what’s the real meaning of gamification? How should people include game dynamics into products? Monte has an insider and interesting point of view about games and gamification. In today’s episode, he will address the importance of fun, a key element for the successful gamification which is sometimes overlooked. And the best stage for gamification is when users feel comfortable to spend the time without restrictions.

Currently Monte is the VP of international business development at iDreamSky Technology, one of the largest independent mobile game publishing platforms in China, and he has brought over 100 mobile games into Chinese markets. We will also talk about his business path from Silicon Valley to China and the technology that he believes will change the game industry. </itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>“Most of the gamification activities happening in the market are superficial” This is a statement from today’s guest Monte Singman, a game veteran with 33-year industry experience.

So what’s the real meaning of gamification? How should people include game dynamics into products? Monte has an insider and interesting point of view about games and gamification. In today’s episode, he will address the importance of fun, a key element for the successful gamification which is sometimes overlooked. And the best stage for gamification is when users feel comfortable to spend the time without restrictions.

Currently Monte is the VP of international business development at iDreamSky Technology, one of the largest independent mobile game publishing platforms in China, and he has brought over 100 mobile games into Chinese markets. We will also talk about his business path from Silicon Valley to China and the technology that he believes will change the game industry. </itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>accelerator, ar, idreamsky, chinaccelerator, games, video games, product, startup, business development, innovation, gamification, mobile games, vr, game publisher, game investment, game dynamics</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:episode>123</itunes:episode>
    </item>
    <item>
      <guid isPermaLink="false">d69ce9fc-6b26-46a3-8b5f-fc4345357d59</guid>
      <title>The Go-to-Market Playbook by NIU: a NASDAQ-listed Chinese Smart E-Scooter Company</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>02:12 Introduce Joseph Constanty</p><p>03:08 Introduce NIU Technologies</p><p>03:37 How Joseph ended up working in mobility</p><p>04:40 Urban transportation problems in emerging markets</p><p>07:38 The position of China in the global electric vehicles industry</p><p>10:45  NIU was firstly launched and sold through online crowdfunding campaigns</p><p>13:04  The e-scooter customers</p><p>15:08  NIU’s history</p><p>18:38  The best practices of bike sharing</p><p>21: 23  The “technology” gene of NIU</p><p>22:43  How NIU uses data to improve the user experience</p><p>25:53  NIU’s playbook of internalization</p><p>30:24  Different data policies in different countries</p><p>32:00  Challenges when a Chinese brand expand to overseas markets</p><p>35:20  Is China a leader in the global mobility industry</p><p>38:15  Model to work with overseas distributers</p><p>40:13  NIU’s unique go-to-market approaches</p><p>43:23 “Cars are the enemy of our cities”</p><p>46:40 How to contact Joseph</p><p>Many thanks to our host Oscar Ramos; our guest Joseph Constanty; producer Eva Shi; editors David and Geep; organizer Chinaccelerator; and sponsors People Squared and Himalaya. Be sure to check out our website <a href="http://www.chinaccelerator.com/">www.chinaccelerator.com</a></p><p>Share, subscribe, review, enjoy!</p><p>Follow us on Linkedin: <a href="http://www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/">www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/</a></p><p>Email us: <a href="mailto:team@chinastartuppulse.com">team@chinastartuppulse.com</a></p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Tue, 4 Feb 2020 00:30:09 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Chinaccelerator)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>02:12 Introduce Joseph Constanty</p><p>03:08 Introduce NIU Technologies</p><p>03:37 How Joseph ended up working in mobility</p><p>04:40 Urban transportation problems in emerging markets</p><p>07:38 The position of China in the global electric vehicles industry</p><p>10:45  NIU was firstly launched and sold through online crowdfunding campaigns</p><p>13:04  The e-scooter customers</p><p>15:08  NIU’s history</p><p>18:38  The best practices of bike sharing</p><p>21: 23  The “technology” gene of NIU</p><p>22:43  How NIU uses data to improve the user experience</p><p>25:53  NIU’s playbook of internalization</p><p>30:24  Different data policies in different countries</p><p>32:00  Challenges when a Chinese brand expand to overseas markets</p><p>35:20  Is China a leader in the global mobility industry</p><p>38:15  Model to work with overseas distributers</p><p>40:13  NIU’s unique go-to-market approaches</p><p>43:23 “Cars are the enemy of our cities”</p><p>46:40 How to contact Joseph</p><p>Many thanks to our host Oscar Ramos; our guest Joseph Constanty; producer Eva Shi; editors David and Geep; organizer Chinaccelerator; and sponsors People Squared and Himalaya. Be sure to check out our website <a href="http://www.chinaccelerator.com/">www.chinaccelerator.com</a></p><p>Share, subscribe, review, enjoy!</p><p>Follow us on Linkedin: <a href="http://www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/">www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/</a></p><p>Email us: <a href="mailto:team@chinastartuppulse.com">team@chinastartuppulse.com</a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
      <enclosure length="34898593" type="audio/mpeg" url="https://dts.podtrac.com/redirect.mp3/cdn.simplecast.com/audio/a0e035/a0e0352f-fcbe-4ea1-813c-f1a09496ed52/714c127e-a2b8-453c-9f50-1746f00c8349/csp-0123-josephconstancy-mixed96_tc.mp3?aid=rss_feed&amp;feed=78I5oQc_"/>
      <itunes:title>The Go-to-Market Playbook by NIU: a NASDAQ-listed Chinese Smart E-Scooter Company</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Chinaccelerator</itunes:author>
      <itunes:image href="https://image.simplecastcdn.com/images/f0ec2b13-bb5e-4311-b84c-7ccfee9698de/8a3d95d0-fdb4-47b4-8fbc-3e02bd176816/3000x3000/wechatimg2502.jpg?aid=rss_feed"/>
      <itunes:duration>00:48:28</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>Today we talk about the global mobility industry with Joseph Constanty, Director of International at NIU Technologies, a Chinese company that produces and sells lithium powered two-wheeler scooters.

Starting from Zero in 2014, NIU has sold over 810,000 vehicles worldwide and continued their international expansion in 34 countries. NIU also went public on NASDAQ in 2018 which is only 4 years after it was founded.

Why is e-scooter a good solution for urban transportation problems? How did they get started and what’s the reason behind its fast growth? In today’s conversation, we will address these questions and also talk about how NIU uses data to improve the hardware products and user experience. Stay tuned until the end where we will take a deep look at their unique go-to-market approaches.</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>Today we talk about the global mobility industry with Joseph Constanty, Director of International at NIU Technologies, a Chinese company that produces and sells lithium powered two-wheeler scooters.

Starting from Zero in 2014, NIU has sold over 810,000 vehicles worldwide and continued their international expansion in 34 countries. NIU also went public on NASDAQ in 2018 which is only 4 years after it was founded.

Why is e-scooter a good solution for urban transportation problems? How did they get started and what’s the reason behind its fast growth? In today’s conversation, we will address these questions and also talk about how NIU uses data to improve the hardware products and user experience. Stay tuned until the end where we will take a deep look at their unique go-to-market approaches.</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>accelerator, bike sharing, e-scooter, go-to-market, iot, electric vehicles, data, china, mobility, transportation, chinaccelerator, venture capital, ipo, hardware, strategy, internalization, niu, market entry, ev, overseas expansion</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:episode>122</itunes:episode>
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      <title>Localizing in the Mobile-Only China Market, with David Chen, CEO &amp; Co-founder of Strikingly</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>02:07 Introduction of David Chen</p><p>03:45 Strikingly's experience in Y Combinator</p><p>05:00 What is Strikingly</p><p>05:30 Why Strikingly went to China and their advantages</p><p>08:40 Build a local presence in the Mobile-Only China market</p><p>16:31 It took 3 years to launch a local product</p><p>17:24 How the name 'Strikingly' was born</p><p>21:10 How Strikingly localized in China</p><p>26:31 Products’ differences for Chinese and global users</p><p>30:30 Special needs from Chinese users - WeChat mini program</p><p>35:39 Regulations of building websites and WeChat mini programs in China</p><p>36:46 How to hire in Shanghai</p><p>Many thanks to our host Oscar Ramos; our guest David Chen; producer Eva Shi; editors David and Geep; ; organizer Chinaccelerator; and sponsors People Squared and Himalaya. Be sure to check out our website <a href="http://www.chinaccelerator.com/">www.chinaccelerator.com</a></p><p>Share, subscribe, review, enjoy!</p><p>Follow us on Linkedin: <a href="http://www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/">www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/</a></p><p>Email us: <a href="mailto:team@chinastartuppulse.com">team@chinastartuppulse.com</a></p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Tue, 24 Dec 2019 01:54:35 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Chinaccelerator)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>02:07 Introduction of David Chen</p><p>03:45 Strikingly's experience in Y Combinator</p><p>05:00 What is Strikingly</p><p>05:30 Why Strikingly went to China and their advantages</p><p>08:40 Build a local presence in the Mobile-Only China market</p><p>16:31 It took 3 years to launch a local product</p><p>17:24 How the name 'Strikingly' was born</p><p>21:10 How Strikingly localized in China</p><p>26:31 Products’ differences for Chinese and global users</p><p>30:30 Special needs from Chinese users - WeChat mini program</p><p>35:39 Regulations of building websites and WeChat mini programs in China</p><p>36:46 How to hire in Shanghai</p><p>Many thanks to our host Oscar Ramos; our guest David Chen; producer Eva Shi; editors David and Geep; ; organizer Chinaccelerator; and sponsors People Squared and Himalaya. Be sure to check out our website <a href="http://www.chinaccelerator.com/">www.chinaccelerator.com</a></p><p>Share, subscribe, review, enjoy!</p><p>Follow us on Linkedin: <a href="http://www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/">www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/</a></p><p>Email us: <a href="mailto:team@chinastartuppulse.com">team@chinastartuppulse.com</a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>Localizing in the Mobile-Only China Market, with David Chen, CEO &amp; Co-founder of Strikingly</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Chinaccelerator</itunes:author>
      <itunes:image href="https://image.simplecastcdn.com/images/f0ec2b13-bb5e-4311-b84c-7ccfee9698de/c75ac1ca-8670-4f3e-a558-cc8888a0596f/3000x3000/0.jpg?aid=rss_feed"/>
      <itunes:duration>00:39:51</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>When entering new markets, it is crucial to be able to localize the business. There are few startups that have achieved this and one of them is Strikingly - a Series B startup that helps non-coders or designers build beautiful websites that work on both mobile and desktop.

In today&apos;s episode, we are happy to have David Chen, CEO and Co-founder of Strikingly to join our podcast China Startup Pulse. David quitted Goldman Sachs and founded Strikingly in the US, which later became the first company to join Y Combinator. After noticing the opportunities in China, David and his team moved the company to China where he has successfully localized the business and continued to serve the global users.

He shared how they have established a strong local presence in China, in terms of product features, marketing channels, and even a Chinese company name.</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>When entering new markets, it is crucial to be able to localize the business. There are few startups that have achieved this and one of them is Strikingly - a Series B startup that helps non-coders or designers build beautiful websites that work on both mobile and desktop.

In today&apos;s episode, we are happy to have David Chen, CEO and Co-founder of Strikingly to join our podcast China Startup Pulse. David quitted Goldman Sachs and founded Strikingly in the US, which later became the first company to join Y Combinator. After noticing the opportunities in China, David and his team moved the company to China where he has successfully localized the business and continued to serve the global users.

He shared how they have established a strong local presence in China, in terms of product features, marketing channels, and even a Chinese company name.</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>accelerator, marketing, website builder, wechat, wechat mini program, china, y combinator, strikingly, localization, chinaccelerator, new market entry, product, entrepreneur, hire in china, mobile only, china market entry, goldman sachs, localize</itunes:keywords>
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      <title>B2B Sales Strategies and Tactics with Jonathan Wu, VP of Sales and Co-founder of GrowingIO</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>01:59 Introduce Jonathan Wu</p><p>02:41 About GrowingIO</p><p>05:23 Why Jonathan started the company</p><p>08:25 How Jonathan decided to take the sales role</p><p>09:50 How GrowingIO got the first client, Liepin.com 猎聘</p><p>12:50 How to train the sales team</p><p>16:13 It takes 12 months for a new sales person to be mature</p><p>17:20 How to onboard the clients and understand pain points of adoption</p><p>21:05 How to select clients</p><p>23:27 Mature Internet companies build their own data platform</p><p>26:35 It’s necessary to add services on top of the software</p><p>29:26 Classify products and services for different clients</p><p>33:12 How GrowingIO has scaled the sales team</p><p>36:08 Connect with the decision maker to close the deal</p><p>37:38 Contact Jonathan</p><p>Many thanks to our guest Jonathan Wu, host Oscar Ramos; ; producers Eva Shi; editors David and Geep; organizer Chinaccelerator; and sponsors People Squared and Himalaya. Be sure to check out our website <a href="http://www.chinaccelerator.com/">www.chinaccelerator.com</a></p><p>If you like us, please give us a 5-star review and share with your friends!</p><p>Follow us on Linkedin: <a href="http://www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/">www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/</a></p><p>Email us: <a href="mailto:team@chinastartuppulse.com">team@chinastartuppulse.com</a></p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Fri, 20 Dec 2019 00:00:01 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Orbit Startups)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>01:59 Introduce Jonathan Wu</p><p>02:41 About GrowingIO</p><p>05:23 Why Jonathan started the company</p><p>08:25 How Jonathan decided to take the sales role</p><p>09:50 How GrowingIO got the first client, Liepin.com 猎聘</p><p>12:50 How to train the sales team</p><p>16:13 It takes 12 months for a new sales person to be mature</p><p>17:20 How to onboard the clients and understand pain points of adoption</p><p>21:05 How to select clients</p><p>23:27 Mature Internet companies build their own data platform</p><p>26:35 It’s necessary to add services on top of the software</p><p>29:26 Classify products and services for different clients</p><p>33:12 How GrowingIO has scaled the sales team</p><p>36:08 Connect with the decision maker to close the deal</p><p>37:38 Contact Jonathan</p><p>Many thanks to our guest Jonathan Wu, host Oscar Ramos; ; producers Eva Shi; editors David and Geep; organizer Chinaccelerator; and sponsors People Squared and Himalaya. Be sure to check out our website <a href="http://www.chinaccelerator.com/">www.chinaccelerator.com</a></p><p>If you like us, please give us a 5-star review and share with your friends!</p><p>Follow us on Linkedin: <a href="http://www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/">www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/</a></p><p>Email us: <a href="mailto:team@chinastartuppulse.com">team@chinastartuppulse.com</a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>B2B Sales Strategies and Tactics with Jonathan Wu, VP of Sales and Co-founder of GrowingIO</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Orbit Startups</itunes:author>
      <itunes:image href="https://image.simplecastcdn.com/images/f0ec2b13-bb5e-4311-b84c-7ccfee9698de/acda383c-c06d-41f2-8145-683da43de5d0/3000x3000/0.jpg?aid=rss_feed"/>
      <itunes:duration>00:39:36</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>Selling your product to businesses is tough. Today, we talk to Jonathan Wu, Co-founder and VP of Sales of a fast-growing B2B SaaS Company GrowingIO, to share with you the most advanced B2B sales strategies based on his experience. GrowingIO is a leading data analytics platform provider in China that helps drive business growth through data insights. Their current clients include Bytedance, China Mobile, Tujia, Didi and more.

He shared very useful strategies and tactics on how to close B2B deals and how to understand clients’ pain points of adoption. As he pointed out, it’s very important to understand your clients, your product and user journey, and also to remember to talk to the decision makers. Later, he used GrowingIO as an example to explain how to classify products for different types of clients, and how GrowingIO has scaled the sales team in the past 5 years.</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>Selling your product to businesses is tough. Today, we talk to Jonathan Wu, Co-founder and VP of Sales of a fast-growing B2B SaaS Company GrowingIO, to share with you the most advanced B2B sales strategies based on his experience. GrowingIO is a leading data analytics platform provider in China that helps drive business growth through data insights. Their current clients include Bytedance, China Mobile, Tujia, Didi and more.

He shared very useful strategies and tactics on how to close B2B deals and how to understand clients’ pain points of adoption. As he pointed out, it’s very important to understand your clients, your product and user journey, and also to remember to talk to the decision makers. Later, he used GrowingIO as an example to explain how to classify products for different types of clients, and how GrowingIO has scaled the sales team in the past 5 years.</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>accelerator, saas, growth hacking, b2b, vc, sales, data analytics, chinaccelerator, product, startup, venture capital, business, client, internet, scale</itunes:keywords>
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      <itunes:episode>120</itunes:episode>
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      <title>How to Prevent PR Crisis in China, with Alex Duncan, co-founder of KAWO</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>01:53 About Alex and KAWO</p><p>02:37 What brought Alex to China</p><p>03:45 How Alex started working for a technology company</p><p>05:26 What has KAWO achieved</p><p>06:28 What makes dynamic social media ecosystem in China</p><p>11:06 Challenges that western brands have in China</p><p>14:56 Social media is way more influential than it was</p><p>19:28 Localization: trust the local team and listen to users</p><p>20:01 Brands are also facing risks from publicity</p><p>25:40 Startups being impacted by the PR crisis</p><p>27:20 The reason why there were more PR crises</p><p>29:24 KAWO’s competitors and challenges</p><p>Many thanks to our guest Alex Duncan, host Oscar Ramos; ; producers Eva Shi; editors David and Geep; organizer Chinaccelerator; and sponsors People Squared and Himalaya. Be sure to check out our website <a href="http://www.chinaccelerator.com/">www.chinaccelerator.com</a></p><p>If you like us, please give us a 5-star review and share with your friends!</p><p>Follow us on Linkedin: <a href="http://www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/">www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/</a></p><p>Email us: <a href="mailto:team@chinastartuppulse.com">team@chinastartuppulse.com</a></p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Fri, 13 Dec 2019 00:00:03 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Chinaccelerator)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>01:53 About Alex and KAWO</p><p>02:37 What brought Alex to China</p><p>03:45 How Alex started working for a technology company</p><p>05:26 What has KAWO achieved</p><p>06:28 What makes dynamic social media ecosystem in China</p><p>11:06 Challenges that western brands have in China</p><p>14:56 Social media is way more influential than it was</p><p>19:28 Localization: trust the local team and listen to users</p><p>20:01 Brands are also facing risks from publicity</p><p>25:40 Startups being impacted by the PR crisis</p><p>27:20 The reason why there were more PR crises</p><p>29:24 KAWO’s competitors and challenges</p><p>Many thanks to our guest Alex Duncan, host Oscar Ramos; ; producers Eva Shi; editors David and Geep; organizer Chinaccelerator; and sponsors People Squared and Himalaya. Be sure to check out our website <a href="http://www.chinaccelerator.com/">www.chinaccelerator.com</a></p><p>If you like us, please give us a 5-star review and share with your friends!</p><p>Follow us on Linkedin: <a href="http://www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/">www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/</a></p><p>Email us: <a href="mailto:team@chinastartuppulse.com">team@chinastartuppulse.com</a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>How to Prevent PR Crisis in China, with Alex Duncan, co-founder of KAWO</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Chinaccelerator</itunes:author>
      <itunes:image href="https://image.simplecastcdn.com/images/f0ec2b13-bb5e-4311-b84c-7ccfee9698de/1336577d-6caf-43a6-b1dd-e37eb040d4bf/3000x3000/wechatimg2504.jpg?aid=rss_feed"/>
      <itunes:duration>00:34:29</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>Social media is one of the most influential means of communication in the world. It helps brands to engage with customers quickly and effectively. However, it also brings potential risks. 

Social media management platform KAWO recently published a report analyzing social media crises in China during the last 10 years. It shows that there were 42 brands crises in 2019 in China, while only 1 incident happened each year from 2009 to 2013. Geographic sovereignty and politics are apparently the dominant causes for these crises. 

We invited Alex Duncan, co-founder of KAWO, in today’s podcast to share his insights about the report, how to manage social media in China, and most importantly how to prevent PR crisis.

Find KAWO’s report here: kawo.com/bcr</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>Social media is one of the most influential means of communication in the world. It helps brands to engage with customers quickly and effectively. However, it also brings potential risks. 

Social media management platform KAWO recently published a report analyzing social media crises in China during the last 10 years. It shows that there were 42 brands crises in 2019 in China, while only 1 incident happened each year from 2009 to 2013. Geographic sovereignty and politics are apparently the dominant causes for these crises. 

We invited Alex Duncan, co-founder of KAWO, in today’s podcast to share his insights about the report, how to manage social media in China, and most importantly how to prevent PR crisis.

Find KAWO’s report here: kawo.com/bcr</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>accelerator, branding, marketing, vc, pr, china, chinaccelerator, social media, brands, startup, venture capital, entrepreneur</itunes:keywords>
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      <itunes:episode>119</itunes:episode>
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      <title>Applying Design Thinking to Launch an IoT Product with Alvin Chiang, Founder of Gululu</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>[2:08] Introducing Alvin Chiang<br />[3:13] About Gululu<br />[4:22] How Gululu chose which problem to solve<br />[9:40] Design thinking in Chinese internet companies<br />[10:38] Lean startup methodology and iteration<br />[12:03] Technology infusion theory and acquiring users<br />[14:05] How Gululu uses IoT to keep users engaged<br />[17:00] Gaming vs. gamification<br />[19:18] Cooperating with parents<br />[21:43] Bringing Gululu to life and building a team<br />[23:50] How Gululu acquired their first users<br />[26:37] What Alvin learned at Alibaba<br />[28:13] Expat vs. local Chinese users<br />[29:41] Market education<br />[32:33] Gululu stickiness<br />[34:00] What opportunities are out there for entrepreneurs?<br />[38:01] How to find Alvin and Gululu</p><p>Many thanks to our hosts Ryan Shuken and Oscar Ramos; our guest Alvin Chiang; producers Eva Shi and Matthew Wu; editors David and Geep; organizer Chinaccelerator; and sponsors People Squared and Himalaya. Be sure to check out our website <a href="http://www.chinaccelerator.com/">www.chinaccelerator.com</a></p><p>If you like us, please give us a 5-star review and share with your friends!</p><p>Follow us on Linkedin: <a href="http://www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/">www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/</a></p><p>Email us: <a href="mailto:team@chinastartuppulse.com">team@chinastartuppulse.com</a></p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Tue, 3 Dec 2019 01:00:07 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Chinaccelerator)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>[2:08] Introducing Alvin Chiang<br />[3:13] About Gululu<br />[4:22] How Gululu chose which problem to solve<br />[9:40] Design thinking in Chinese internet companies<br />[10:38] Lean startup methodology and iteration<br />[12:03] Technology infusion theory and acquiring users<br />[14:05] How Gululu uses IoT to keep users engaged<br />[17:00] Gaming vs. gamification<br />[19:18] Cooperating with parents<br />[21:43] Bringing Gululu to life and building a team<br />[23:50] How Gululu acquired their first users<br />[26:37] What Alvin learned at Alibaba<br />[28:13] Expat vs. local Chinese users<br />[29:41] Market education<br />[32:33] Gululu stickiness<br />[34:00] What opportunities are out there for entrepreneurs?<br />[38:01] How to find Alvin and Gululu</p><p>Many thanks to our hosts Ryan Shuken and Oscar Ramos; our guest Alvin Chiang; producers Eva Shi and Matthew Wu; editors David and Geep; organizer Chinaccelerator; and sponsors People Squared and Himalaya. Be sure to check out our website <a href="http://www.chinaccelerator.com/">www.chinaccelerator.com</a></p><p>If you like us, please give us a 5-star review and share with your friends!</p><p>Follow us on Linkedin: <a href="http://www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/">www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/</a></p><p>Email us: <a href="mailto:team@chinastartuppulse.com">team@chinastartuppulse.com</a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>Applying Design Thinking to Launch an IoT Product with Alvin Chiang, Founder of Gululu</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Chinaccelerator</itunes:author>
      <itunes:image href="https://image.simplecastcdn.com/images/f0ec2b13-bb5e-4311-b84c-7ccfee9698de/323920f7-e782-4fca-87c7-2e12684010e3/3000x3000/0-1.jpg?aid=rss_feed"/>
      <itunes:duration>00:39:26</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>Design thinking. Lean startup methodology. Validation. Market Research. These concepts are familiar to every founder, and they are vital to any company’s success, but so few startups are able to do them well.

Today’s guest, Alvin Chiang, is an exception. A veteran of internet giants NetEase, Alibaba, and Renren, Alvin founded Gululu in 2014. Gululu enhances children’s wellness through smart IoT technologies, and their first creation is a smart water bottle designed to help children cultivate healthy habits.

In this episode, we discuss the extensive market research that went into the birth of Gululu and the ongoing development of the product. During the course of the conversation, we were thrilled to discover that Gululu is a perfect use case for design thinking.</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>Design thinking. Lean startup methodology. Validation. Market Research. These concepts are familiar to every founder, and they are vital to any company’s success, but so few startups are able to do them well.

Today’s guest, Alvin Chiang, is an exception. A veteran of internet giants NetEase, Alibaba, and Renren, Alvin founded Gululu in 2014. Gululu enhances children’s wellness through smart IoT technologies, and their first creation is a smart water bottle designed to help children cultivate healthy habits.

In this episode, we discuss the extensive market research that went into the birth of Gululu and the ongoing development of the product. During the course of the conversation, we were thrilled to discover that Gululu is a perfect use case for design thinking.</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>accelerator, lean startup, iot, alibaba, netease, vc, iteration, smart home, gululu, chinaccelerator, validation, children, users, product, startup, venture capital, entrepreneur, design thinking, market research, renren</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:episode>118</itunes:episode>
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      <title>What’s Next for Ctrip (Trip.com Group) with Margaret Feng, Head of Innovation</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>01:16  Innovation in the US and China</p><p>04:39 The landscape of the travel Industry in China</p><p>06:54 Chinese innovation with global potential</p><p>07:49 Exciting travel innovation practices</p><p>10:20 Hype around new technology</p><p>11:30 China as the early adopter market</p><p>13:40 Exploring offline activities</p><p>14:07 Acquiring customers in lower tier cities</p><p>18:13 From “Ctrip” to “<a href="http://Trip.com">Trip.com</a> Group”</p><p>19:30 Ctrip expanding to emerging markets</p><p>20:25 The collaboration models with startups</p><p>23:12 Running pilots</p><p>26:03 Pilots in B2B space</p><p>27:24 User experience</p><p>29:40 Early stage investment</p><p>Many thanks to our host Oscar Ramos, our guest Margaret Feng, producers Eva Shi and Matthew Wu, editors David and Geep, organizer Chinaccelerator, and sponsor People Squared and Himalaya. Be sure to check out our website <a href="http://www.chinaccelerator.com/">www.chinaccelerator.com</a></p><p>If you like us, please give us a 5-star review and share with your friends!</p><p>Follow us on Linkedin: <a href="http://www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/">www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/</a></p><p>Email us: <a href="mailto:team@chinastartuppulse.com">team@chinastartuppulse.com</a></p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Thu, 21 Nov 2019 02:00:18 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Chinaccelerator)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>01:16  Innovation in the US and China</p><p>04:39 The landscape of the travel Industry in China</p><p>06:54 Chinese innovation with global potential</p><p>07:49 Exciting travel innovation practices</p><p>10:20 Hype around new technology</p><p>11:30 China as the early adopter market</p><p>13:40 Exploring offline activities</p><p>14:07 Acquiring customers in lower tier cities</p><p>18:13 From “Ctrip” to “<a href="http://Trip.com">Trip.com</a> Group”</p><p>19:30 Ctrip expanding to emerging markets</p><p>20:25 The collaboration models with startups</p><p>23:12 Running pilots</p><p>26:03 Pilots in B2B space</p><p>27:24 User experience</p><p>29:40 Early stage investment</p><p>Many thanks to our host Oscar Ramos, our guest Margaret Feng, producers Eva Shi and Matthew Wu, editors David and Geep, organizer Chinaccelerator, and sponsor People Squared and Himalaya. Be sure to check out our website <a href="http://www.chinaccelerator.com/">www.chinaccelerator.com</a></p><p>If you like us, please give us a 5-star review and share with your friends!</p><p>Follow us on Linkedin: <a href="http://www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/">www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/</a></p><p>Email us: <a href="mailto:team@chinastartuppulse.com">team@chinastartuppulse.com</a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>What’s Next for Ctrip (Trip.com Group) with Margaret Feng, Head of Innovation</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Chinaccelerator</itunes:author>
      <itunes:image href="https://image.simplecastcdn.com/images/f0ec2b13-bb5e-4311-b84c-7ccfee9698de/3857d04a-0810-496e-8174-1206df08c480/3000x3000/wechatimg2507.jpg?aid=rss_feed"/>
      <itunes:duration>00:33:12</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>What’s next for OTAs? 

The growth of online travel users and transactions in China has slowed in the past two years. Has the online travel market hit a bottleneck? Where will the next opportunities arise? As one of the industry titans, Trip.com Group (formerly known as Ctrip) is at the forefront of experimenting with new initiatives to maintain its competitive position in the market.

As Head of Innovation at Trip.com Group, Margaret Feng, shares how they are exploring new offline products and planning how to acquire more customers in lower-tier cities. More importantly, she explains how Trip.com Group is embracing the concept of open innovation by investing in and collaborating with startups. Stay tuned to learn how Trip.com Group runs pilot programs with startups and tests new concepts and technologies in the market.</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>What’s next for OTAs? 

The growth of online travel users and transactions in China has slowed in the past two years. Has the online travel market hit a bottleneck? Where will the next opportunities arise? As one of the industry titans, Trip.com Group (formerly known as Ctrip) is at the forefront of experimenting with new initiatives to maintain its competitive position in the market.

As Head of Innovation at Trip.com Group, Margaret Feng, shares how they are exploring new offline products and planning how to acquire more customers in lower-tier cities. More importantly, she explains how Trip.com Group is embracing the concept of open innovation by investing in and collaborating with startups. Stay tuned to learn how Trip.com Group runs pilot programs with startups and tests new concepts and technologies in the market.</itunes:subtitle>
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      <title>How to Understand Venture Capital in China with Victor Chao, Partner at SAIF</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>What factors are RMB investors considering that USD investors are not? What can the difference between Chinese VC firms and American VC firms tell us about the innovation and entrepreneurship lanscape in these countries? As venture capital funding slows down in China, how is this affecting entrepreneurs?</p><p>Today we are lucky to have the perfect person to answer these questions: Victor Chao, Partner of the RMB fund at SAIF, a leading private equity firm in China. Victor has lived and worked all over the world, and so he has a great perspective on how understanding VCs can help us understand the state of innovation in a country.</p><p>[1:20] Introducing Victor Chao and his journey to the VC world<br />[6:40] SAIF Partners history and growth<br />[8:11] Difference between private equity (PE) and venture capital (VC) investment strategies<br />[10:20] Difference between American and Chinese PE/VC investment<br />[14:20] What makes the China market unique: speed, mobility, and more<br />[16:55] Who are the investors for USD and RMB funds, and how do they impact investment strategies<br />[22:30] How exits and investing stages differ for USD and RMB funds<br />[25:15] How do different fund types influence what industries investors are looking at<br />[27:14] The RMB investment cooldown in China and how it is impacting investment strategies<br />[30:00] For a PE/VC firm, does size or performance matter more?<br />[32:10] How should entrepreneurs navigate today’s investment landscape<br />[35:40] How can entrepreneurs stand out for investment firms like SAIF</p><p>Many thanks to our host Oscar Ramos; our guest Victor Chao; editors David and Geep; producers Eva Shi and Matthew Wu; organizer Chinaccelerator; and sponsors People Squared and Himalaya. Be sure to check out our website <a href="http://www.chinaccelerator.com">www.chinaccelerator.com</a></p><p>Share, subscribe, review, enjoy!</p><p>Follow us on Linkedin: <a href="http://www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/">www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/</a></p><p>Email us: <a href="mailto:team@chinastartuppulse.com">team@chinastartuppulse.com</a></p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Thu, 31 Oct 2019 00:00:07 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Orbit Startups)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>What factors are RMB investors considering that USD investors are not? What can the difference between Chinese VC firms and American VC firms tell us about the innovation and entrepreneurship lanscape in these countries? As venture capital funding slows down in China, how is this affecting entrepreneurs?</p><p>Today we are lucky to have the perfect person to answer these questions: Victor Chao, Partner of the RMB fund at SAIF, a leading private equity firm in China. Victor has lived and worked all over the world, and so he has a great perspective on how understanding VCs can help us understand the state of innovation in a country.</p><p>[1:20] Introducing Victor Chao and his journey to the VC world<br />[6:40] SAIF Partners history and growth<br />[8:11] Difference between private equity (PE) and venture capital (VC) investment strategies<br />[10:20] Difference between American and Chinese PE/VC investment<br />[14:20] What makes the China market unique: speed, mobility, and more<br />[16:55] Who are the investors for USD and RMB funds, and how do they impact investment strategies<br />[22:30] How exits and investing stages differ for USD and RMB funds<br />[25:15] How do different fund types influence what industries investors are looking at<br />[27:14] The RMB investment cooldown in China and how it is impacting investment strategies<br />[30:00] For a PE/VC firm, does size or performance matter more?<br />[32:10] How should entrepreneurs navigate today’s investment landscape<br />[35:40] How can entrepreneurs stand out for investment firms like SAIF</p><p>Many thanks to our host Oscar Ramos; our guest Victor Chao; editors David and Geep; producers Eva Shi and Matthew Wu; organizer Chinaccelerator; and sponsors People Squared and Himalaya. Be sure to check out our website <a href="http://www.chinaccelerator.com">www.chinaccelerator.com</a></p><p>Share, subscribe, review, enjoy!</p><p>Follow us on Linkedin: <a href="http://www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/">www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/</a></p><p>Email us: <a href="mailto:team@chinastartuppulse.com">team@chinastartuppulse.com</a></p>
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      <itunes:title>How to Understand Venture Capital in China with Victor Chao, Partner at SAIF</itunes:title>
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Today we are lucky to have the perfect person to answer these questions: Victor Chao, Partner of the RMB fund at SAIF, a leading private equity firm in China. Victor has lived and worked all over the world, and so he has a great perspective on how understanding VCs can help us understand the state of innovation in a country. </itunes:subtitle>
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      <title>Building Community-Based Startups, &quot;Dancing with Gorillas&quot;, How to Choose a Co-Founder; 8x8 Speakers Series (3/3) with Jill Tang, Shameen Prashantham, and Catherine Kang</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>This is the third and final episode from our Chinaccelerator 8x8 Speakers Series. Twice a year, we invite some of the most accomplished and thoughtful members of the China startup ecosystem to share key lessons for startups in eight minutes or less.</p><p>Our theme for this episode is partnerships and relationships in the startup world. We have three fantastic speakers who will talk about this theme from different angles: Jill Tang, Shameen Prashantham, and Catherine Kang.</p><p>[1:55] Jill Tang, Building Community-Based Startups<br />[9:55] Shameen Prashantham, "Dancing With Gorillas": How Startups and Large Companies Work Together<br />[18:29] Catherine Kang, How to Choose a Co-Founder</p><p>Jill Tang is a serial entrepreneur, community builder, and business KOL. She is the co-founder of Ladies Who Tech, China’s first and largest community dedicated to promoting gender diversity and inclusion in STEM. She is also the co-founder and managing partner of Cosmic Venture, which combines lean methodology and proprietary algorithm to assess brands with real time market validation.</p><p>Dr. Shameen Prashantham is an Associate Professor of International Business & Strategy at China Europe International Business School (CEIBS) in Shanghai. He previously taught at Nottingham University Business School and Glasgow University Business School, after earning his PhD from the University of Strathclyde in Scotland, UK. His research focuses on how new ventures and large multinationals partner with each other.</p><p>Catherine is a leading professional in the Health and Beauty, Luxury Goods, High-end Service and Retail industry with more than 20 years of experience in Sales, Marketing and General Management. She is now the founder and CEO of PHISKIN, a leading brand on female anti-aging therapy, functional cosmetics, beauty cosmetology and plastic surgery.</p><p> </p><p>Many thanks to our host Oscar Ramos; our guests Jill, Shameen, and Catherine; editors David and Geep; producers Eva Shi and Matthew Wu; organizer Chinaccelerator; and sponsors People Squared and Himalaya. Be sure to check out our website <a href="http://www.chinaccelerator.com/">www.chinaccelerator.com</a></p><p>If you like us, please give us a review and share with your friends!</p><p>Follow us on Linkedin: <a href="http://www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/">www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/</a></p><p>Email us: <a href="mailto:team@chinastartuppulse.com">team@chinastartuppulse.com</a></p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Wed, 23 Oct 2019 02:23:14 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Orbit Startups)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>This is the third and final episode from our Chinaccelerator 8x8 Speakers Series. Twice a year, we invite some of the most accomplished and thoughtful members of the China startup ecosystem to share key lessons for startups in eight minutes or less.</p><p>Our theme for this episode is partnerships and relationships in the startup world. We have three fantastic speakers who will talk about this theme from different angles: Jill Tang, Shameen Prashantham, and Catherine Kang.</p><p>[1:55] Jill Tang, Building Community-Based Startups<br />[9:55] Shameen Prashantham, "Dancing With Gorillas": How Startups and Large Companies Work Together<br />[18:29] Catherine Kang, How to Choose a Co-Founder</p><p>Jill Tang is a serial entrepreneur, community builder, and business KOL. She is the co-founder of Ladies Who Tech, China’s first and largest community dedicated to promoting gender diversity and inclusion in STEM. She is also the co-founder and managing partner of Cosmic Venture, which combines lean methodology and proprietary algorithm to assess brands with real time market validation.</p><p>Dr. Shameen Prashantham is an Associate Professor of International Business & Strategy at China Europe International Business School (CEIBS) in Shanghai. He previously taught at Nottingham University Business School and Glasgow University Business School, after earning his PhD from the University of Strathclyde in Scotland, UK. His research focuses on how new ventures and large multinationals partner with each other.</p><p>Catherine is a leading professional in the Health and Beauty, Luxury Goods, High-end Service and Retail industry with more than 20 years of experience in Sales, Marketing and General Management. She is now the founder and CEO of PHISKIN, a leading brand on female anti-aging therapy, functional cosmetics, beauty cosmetology and plastic surgery.</p><p> </p><p>Many thanks to our host Oscar Ramos; our guests Jill, Shameen, and Catherine; editors David and Geep; producers Eva Shi and Matthew Wu; organizer Chinaccelerator; and sponsors People Squared and Himalaya. Be sure to check out our website <a href="http://www.chinaccelerator.com/">www.chinaccelerator.com</a></p><p>If you like us, please give us a review and share with your friends!</p><p>Follow us on Linkedin: <a href="http://www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/">www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/</a></p><p>Email us: <a href="mailto:team@chinastartuppulse.com">team@chinastartuppulse.com</a></p>
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      <itunes:title>Building Community-Based Startups, &quot;Dancing with Gorillas&quot;, How to Choose a Co-Founder; 8x8 Speakers Series (3/3) with Jill Tang, Shameen Prashantham, and Catherine Kang</itunes:title>
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      <itunes:duration>00:33:29</itunes:duration>
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Our theme for this episode is partnerships and relationships in the startup world. We have three fantastic speakers who will talk about this theme from different angles: Jill Tang, Shameen Prashantham, and Catherine Kang.</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>This is the third and final episode from our Chinaccelerator 8x8 Speakers Series. Twice a year, we invite some of the most accomplished and thoughtful members of the China startup ecosystem to share key lessons for startups in eight minutes or less.

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      <description><![CDATA[<p>Today we’re bringing you the second episode from our Chinaccelerator 8x8 Speakers Series. Twice a year, we invite some of the most accomplished and thoughtful members of the China startup ecosystem to share key lessons for startups in eight minutes or less.</p><p>Our theme for this episode is investor insights. Our theme for this episode is investor insights. We have three people with very different perspectives on Asia investment: Shirley Mao, Paul Meyers, and Katherine Lui.  </p><p>[2:18] Shirley Mao, Finding Opportunities Overseas<br />[10:10] Paul Meyers, Doing Well By Doing Good (Impact Investing)<br />[21:35] Katherine Lui, How to Ruin Your Fundraising</p><p>Shirley Mao is Executive Director and Head of India Investment at Xiaomi Technology. Previously she was the Managing Director of PreAngel Partners, a one billion RMB fund focused on early stage mobile internet startups. Shirley has an extensive experience in investments and financial risk management.  </p><p>Paul Meyers, a serial entrepreneur with over 25 years of experience building the startup ecosystem in Asia. Paul is currently an Advisor at ADBVentures, helping to build the Asian Development Bank’s emerging market impact fund. He previously ran Telstra’s muru-D early stage accelerator program in Asia, and was Southeast Asia EIR for SOSV’s MOX - The Mobile Accelerator.  </p><p>Katherine started her professional life with KPMG. In 2005 Katherine co-founded Centerstone Partners, a cross-border private equity firm. Later she carried out financial due diligence on over 100 up-and-coming technology companies. Inspired by these fast-growing companies, Katherine created CanCan 看看, which provides automated CFO services to tech/internet companies.    </p><p>Many thanks to our host Oscar Ramos; our guests Shirley, Paul, and Katherine; editors David and Geep; producers Eva Shi and Matthew Wu; organizer Chinaccelerator; and sponsors People Squared and Himalaya. Be sure to check out our website <a href="http://www.chinaccelerator.com">www.chinaccelerator.com</a>    </p><p>If you like us, please give us a review and share with your friends!  </p><p>Follow us on Linkedin: <a href="http://www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/">www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/</a>  </p><p>Email us: <a href="mailto:team@chinastartuppulse.com">team@chinastartuppulse.com</a>  </p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Wed, 16 Oct 2019 02:30:50 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Orbit Startups)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Today we’re bringing you the second episode from our Chinaccelerator 8x8 Speakers Series. Twice a year, we invite some of the most accomplished and thoughtful members of the China startup ecosystem to share key lessons for startups in eight minutes or less.</p><p>Our theme for this episode is investor insights. Our theme for this episode is investor insights. We have three people with very different perspectives on Asia investment: Shirley Mao, Paul Meyers, and Katherine Lui.  </p><p>[2:18] Shirley Mao, Finding Opportunities Overseas<br />[10:10] Paul Meyers, Doing Well By Doing Good (Impact Investing)<br />[21:35] Katherine Lui, How to Ruin Your Fundraising</p><p>Shirley Mao is Executive Director and Head of India Investment at Xiaomi Technology. Previously she was the Managing Director of PreAngel Partners, a one billion RMB fund focused on early stage mobile internet startups. Shirley has an extensive experience in investments and financial risk management.  </p><p>Paul Meyers, a serial entrepreneur with over 25 years of experience building the startup ecosystem in Asia. Paul is currently an Advisor at ADBVentures, helping to build the Asian Development Bank’s emerging market impact fund. He previously ran Telstra’s muru-D early stage accelerator program in Asia, and was Southeast Asia EIR for SOSV’s MOX - The Mobile Accelerator.  </p><p>Katherine started her professional life with KPMG. In 2005 Katherine co-founded Centerstone Partners, a cross-border private equity firm. Later she carried out financial due diligence on over 100 up-and-coming technology companies. Inspired by these fast-growing companies, Katherine created CanCan 看看, which provides automated CFO services to tech/internet companies.    </p><p>Many thanks to our host Oscar Ramos; our guests Shirley, Paul, and Katherine; editors David and Geep; producers Eva Shi and Matthew Wu; organizer Chinaccelerator; and sponsors People Squared and Himalaya. Be sure to check out our website <a href="http://www.chinaccelerator.com">www.chinaccelerator.com</a>    </p><p>If you like us, please give us a review and share with your friends!  </p><p>Follow us on Linkedin: <a href="http://www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/">www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/</a>  </p><p>Email us: <a href="mailto:team@chinastartuppulse.com">team@chinastartuppulse.com</a>  </p>
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      <itunes:title>Finding Opportunities in India, Doing Well By Doing Good (Impact Investing), How to Ruin Your Fundraising; 8x8 Speakers Series (2/3) with Shirley Mao, Paul Meyers, and Katherine Lui</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Orbit Startups</itunes:author>
      <itunes:duration>00:31:04</itunes:duration>
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Our theme for this episode is investor insights. We have three amazing speakers with very different perspectives on Asia investment: Shirley Mao, Paul Meyers, and Katherine Lui.</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>Today we’re bringing you the second episode from our Chinaccelerator 8x8 Speakers Series. Twice a year, we invite some of the most accomplished and thoughtful members of the China startup ecosystem to share key lessons for startups in eight minutes or less. 

Our theme for this episode is investor insights. We have three amazing speakers with very different perspectives on Asia investment: Shirley Mao, Paul Meyers, and Katherine Lui.</itunes:subtitle>
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      <title>8 Entrepreneurship Lessons, How to Hire Better, Growth Simplified; 8x8 Speakers Series (1/3) with T.R. Harrington, Sarah Keenlyside, and Guy Sivan</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>We have a special episode today, it’s the Chinaccelerator 8x8 Speakers Series! Twice a year, we invite eight speakers to share key lessons for startups in eight minutes or less. This time, our speakers include serial entrepreneurs, investors, professors, and more. They are some of the most accomplished and thoughtful members of the China startup ecosystem, so we are thrilled to bring you their insights.  </p><p>This week, the theme is entrepreneurship lessons. We have three talks from successful founders who have experience building companies from the ground up. Stay tuned for insights from T.R. Harrington, Sarah Keenlyside, and Guy Sivan!   </p><p>[2:08] T.R. Harrington, 8 Startup Lessons in 8 Minutes<br />[13:15] Sarah Keenlyside, How to Hire Better<br />[20:32] Guy Sivan, Growth Simplified  </p><p>T.R. Harrington is the current Program Director at MOX – the Mobile Only Accelerator. He is also a startup mentor, an angel investor, and the founder and CEO of Darwin Marketing which was successfully acquired by iProspect in 2016.  </p><p>Sarah Keenlyside is Founder and CEO Bespoke Travel Company. She was recently nominated for the 'Most Pioneering Woman in Travel' Award by the Telegraph Newspaper, and an 'Inspiring Woman Award' in the British Business Awards.</p><p>Guy is a serial entrepreneur in China. In 2010, he sold his third startup's core technology to a publicly listed company. He is currently the co-founder of Vericant, a company that helps US schools better understand their Chinese applicants through on-demand video interviews. </p><p>Many thanks to our host Oscar Ramos; our guests T.R, Sarah, and Guy; editors David and Geep; producers Eva Shi and Matthew Wu; organizer Chinaccelerator; and sponsors People Squared and Himalaya. Be sure to check out our website <a href="http://www.chinaccelerator.com">www.chinaccelerator.com</a>  </p><p>If you like us, please give us a 5-star review and share with your friends!  </p><p>Follow us on Linkedin: <a href="http://www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/">www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/</a>  </p><p>Email us: <a href="mailto:team@chinastartuppulse.com">team@chinastartuppulse.com</a>  </p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Tue, 8 Oct 2019 01:57:28 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Orbit Startups)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>We have a special episode today, it’s the Chinaccelerator 8x8 Speakers Series! Twice a year, we invite eight speakers to share key lessons for startups in eight minutes or less. This time, our speakers include serial entrepreneurs, investors, professors, and more. They are some of the most accomplished and thoughtful members of the China startup ecosystem, so we are thrilled to bring you their insights.  </p><p>This week, the theme is entrepreneurship lessons. We have three talks from successful founders who have experience building companies from the ground up. Stay tuned for insights from T.R. Harrington, Sarah Keenlyside, and Guy Sivan!   </p><p>[2:08] T.R. Harrington, 8 Startup Lessons in 8 Minutes<br />[13:15] Sarah Keenlyside, How to Hire Better<br />[20:32] Guy Sivan, Growth Simplified  </p><p>T.R. Harrington is the current Program Director at MOX – the Mobile Only Accelerator. He is also a startup mentor, an angel investor, and the founder and CEO of Darwin Marketing which was successfully acquired by iProspect in 2016.  </p><p>Sarah Keenlyside is Founder and CEO Bespoke Travel Company. She was recently nominated for the 'Most Pioneering Woman in Travel' Award by the Telegraph Newspaper, and an 'Inspiring Woman Award' in the British Business Awards.</p><p>Guy is a serial entrepreneur in China. In 2010, he sold his third startup's core technology to a publicly listed company. He is currently the co-founder of Vericant, a company that helps US schools better understand their Chinese applicants through on-demand video interviews. </p><p>Many thanks to our host Oscar Ramos; our guests T.R, Sarah, and Guy; editors David and Geep; producers Eva Shi and Matthew Wu; organizer Chinaccelerator; and sponsors People Squared and Himalaya. Be sure to check out our website <a href="http://www.chinaccelerator.com">www.chinaccelerator.com</a>  </p><p>If you like us, please give us a 5-star review and share with your friends!  </p><p>Follow us on Linkedin: <a href="http://www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/">www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/</a>  </p><p>Email us: <a href="mailto:team@chinastartuppulse.com">team@chinastartuppulse.com</a>  </p>
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      <itunes:title>8 Entrepreneurship Lessons, How to Hire Better, Growth Simplified; 8x8 Speakers Series (1/3) with T.R. Harrington, Sarah Keenlyside, and Guy Sivan</itunes:title>
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      <itunes:summary>We have a special episode today, it’s the Chinaccelerator 8x8 Speakers Series! Twice a year, we invite eight speakers to share key lessons for startups in eight minutes or less. This time, our speakers include serial entrepreneurs, investors, professors, and more. They are some of the most accomplished and thoughtful members of the China startup ecosystem, so we are thrilled to bring you their insights.

This week, the theme is entrepreneurship lessons. We have three talks from successful founders who have experience building companies from the ground up. Stay tuned for insights from T.R. Harrington, Sarah Keenlyside, and Guy Sivan! </itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>We have a special episode today, it’s the Chinaccelerator 8x8 Speakers Series! Twice a year, we invite eight speakers to share key lessons for startups in eight minutes or less. This time, our speakers include serial entrepreneurs, investors, professors, and more. They are some of the most accomplished and thoughtful members of the China startup ecosystem, so we are thrilled to bring you their insights.

This week, the theme is entrepreneurship lessons. We have three talks from successful founders who have experience building companies from the ground up. Stay tuned for insights from T.R. Harrington, Sarah Keenlyside, and Guy Sivan! </itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>entrepreneurship, china, 8x8, startups</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
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      <title>How to Succeed in China B2B with Olivier d&apos;Arros, Investor and Serial Entrepreneur</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>Navigating the world of B2B in China is tough business, especially when you are dealing with giant state-owned enterprises. It can be even more difficult when you are foreigner. As a result, most foreign entrepreneurs focus on the B2C space, yet a few have found the key to creating successful B2B companies.</p><p>One of these businesspeople is today's guest, Olivier d'Arros. Olivier started his career in venture capital, and then co-founded 4 technology companies, all in B2B applications. He is now Managing Partner at MAVIE Technologies, an investment banking boutique with a focus on cross-border transactions in healthtech and industry 4.0.</p><p>In his many years working in China, Oliver has seen firsthand how B2B has evolved, and there's plenty to learn from his experience. Join us for this week's episode, as we dive into China's B2B landscape.</p><p>[2:23] Starting a B2B business in a short period of time<br />[4:56] Why B2B is an interesting space for startups to explore<br />[7:46] Increasing competition forcing companies to innovate or die<br />[9:29] What industries have the most opportunities in China?<br />[11:28] Why startup founders are afraid of the B2B space<br />[14:07] Jobs in China at risk of automation<br />[16:14] Do B2B companies find value in paying for software?<br />[17:30] Software value and the influx of robotics technology into China<br />[20:07] Why was it easier to sell to state-owned enterprises?<br />[22:33] IP protection issues in state-owned enterprises<br />[26:57] Trends in Chinese technology expanding overseas</p><p>Many thanks to our host Oscar Ramos, our guest Olivier d'Arros, editors David and Geep, producers Eva Shi and Matthew Wu, organizer Chinaccelerator, and sponsor People Squared. Be sure to check out our website <a href="http://www.chinaccelerator.com/">www.chinaccelerator.com</a></p><p>If you like us, please give us a 5-star review and share with your friends!</p><p>Follow us on Linkedin: <a href="http://www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/">www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/</a></p><p>Email us: <a href="mailto:team@chinastartuppulse.com">team@chinastartuppulse.com</a></p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Tue, 17 Sep 2019 02:29:31 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Orbit Startups)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Navigating the world of B2B in China is tough business, especially when you are dealing with giant state-owned enterprises. It can be even more difficult when you are foreigner. As a result, most foreign entrepreneurs focus on the B2C space, yet a few have found the key to creating successful B2B companies.</p><p>One of these businesspeople is today's guest, Olivier d'Arros. Olivier started his career in venture capital, and then co-founded 4 technology companies, all in B2B applications. He is now Managing Partner at MAVIE Technologies, an investment banking boutique with a focus on cross-border transactions in healthtech and industry 4.0.</p><p>In his many years working in China, Oliver has seen firsthand how B2B has evolved, and there's plenty to learn from his experience. Join us for this week's episode, as we dive into China's B2B landscape.</p><p>[2:23] Starting a B2B business in a short period of time<br />[4:56] Why B2B is an interesting space for startups to explore<br />[7:46] Increasing competition forcing companies to innovate or die<br />[9:29] What industries have the most opportunities in China?<br />[11:28] Why startup founders are afraid of the B2B space<br />[14:07] Jobs in China at risk of automation<br />[16:14] Do B2B companies find value in paying for software?<br />[17:30] Software value and the influx of robotics technology into China<br />[20:07] Why was it easier to sell to state-owned enterprises?<br />[22:33] IP protection issues in state-owned enterprises<br />[26:57] Trends in Chinese technology expanding overseas</p><p>Many thanks to our host Oscar Ramos, our guest Olivier d'Arros, editors David and Geep, producers Eva Shi and Matthew Wu, organizer Chinaccelerator, and sponsor People Squared. Be sure to check out our website <a href="http://www.chinaccelerator.com/">www.chinaccelerator.com</a></p><p>If you like us, please give us a 5-star review and share with your friends!</p><p>Follow us on Linkedin: <a href="http://www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/">www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/</a></p><p>Email us: <a href="mailto:team@chinastartuppulse.com">team@chinastartuppulse.com</a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>How to Succeed in China B2B with Olivier d&apos;Arros, Investor and Serial Entrepreneur</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Orbit Startups</itunes:author>
      <itunes:duration>00:29:52</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>Navigating the world of B2B in China is tough business, especially when you are dealing with giant state-owned enterprises. It can be even more difficult when you are foreigner. As a result, most foreign entrepreneurs focus on the B2C space, yet a few have found the key to creating successful B2B companies.

One of these businesspeople is today&apos;s guest, Olivier d&apos;Arros. Olivier started his career in venture capital, and then co-founded 4 technology companies, all in B2B applications. He is now Managing Partner at MAVIE Technologies, an investment banking boutique with a focus on cross-border transactions in healthtech and industry 4.0.

In his many years working in China, Oliver has seen firsthand how B2B has evolved, and there&apos;s plenty to learn from his experience. Join us for this week&apos;s episode, as we dive into China&apos;s B2B landscape.</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>Navigating the world of B2B in China is tough business, especially when you are dealing with giant state-owned enterprises. It can be even more difficult when you are foreigner. As a result, most foreign entrepreneurs focus on the B2C space, yet a few have found the key to creating successful B2B companies.

One of these businesspeople is today&apos;s guest, Olivier d&apos;Arros. Olivier started his career in venture capital, and then co-founded 4 technology companies, all in B2B applications. He is now Managing Partner at MAVIE Technologies, an investment banking boutique with a focus on cross-border transactions in healthtech and industry 4.0.

In his many years working in China, Oliver has seen firsthand how B2B has evolved, and there&apos;s plenty to learn from his experience. Join us for this week&apos;s episode, as we dive into China&apos;s B2B landscape.</itunes:subtitle>
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      <title>How China&apos;s Beating the West in Innovation with Richard Turrin, FinTech expert, author of &quot;Innovation Lab Excellence&quot; and former head of IBM&apos;s Cognitive Studio</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>To many people in the West, China is thought of as a copyer rather than an innovator. However, according to today's guest Richard Turrin, there are many areas in which China is out-innovating even the most advanced Western countries. Richard says "Innovation is really about people and how they relate to new technologies," and in China both companies and people develop and adopt new technologies at an astonishing rate—they are "some of the best users of technology on the planet."</p><p>This innovation isn't only happening on the tech side, but also in the corporate space. Richard is the former head of IBM’s Cognitive Studio and author of the book ‘Innovation Lab Excellence’, with over 20 years experience in innovation in both China and the West. During this conversation, he also shares insights on why innovation labs become ineffective. Big corporates all around the world are spending massive amounts of resources to connect with startups. Yet, there are still doubts about the tangible impact of many innovation labs.</p><p>Tune in for a provocative conversation on the mistakes innovation labs make, and the differences in attitude towards innovation in the West and China.</p><p>[01:24] Intro of Richard Turrin<br />[02:23] Why some Innovation Labs work well and others don’t<br />[03:40] A short History of Innovation Labs<br />[04:09] Why best-practices are more suitable for Innovation Labs than fixed rules<br />[05:27] Are Innovation Labs unable to attain their goal or are they failing to actually set goals?<br />[06:56] How fear of competition is an obstacle to Innovation Labs<br />[10:41] Innovation in China & Difference in attitude towards innovation in the West and in China<br />[12:02] Chinese companies biggest advantages<br />[15:52] The growing trend of Chinese Innovation aimed at the whole World<br />[19:55] The three major reasons why people might not be thinking about China?<br />[25:29] Difference between R&D and Innovation<br />[28:00] Push vs Pull innovation strategy<br />[30:05] Blockchain in China<br />[32:19] People’s Bank of China supported Cryptocurreny<br />[35:17] Message to companies who are not thinking about China<br />[37:43] Contact Information Richard Turrin</p><p>Many thanks to our host Oscar Ramos, our guest Richard Turrin, editor David and Geep, producer Matthew Wu and Eva Shi, organizer Chinaccelerator and sponsor People Squared. Be sure to check out our website <a href="http://www.chinaccelerator.com">www.chinaccelerator.com</a></p><p>If you like us, please give us a 5-star review and share with your friends!</p><p>Follow us on Linkedin: <a href="http://www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/">www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/</a></p><p>Email us: <a href="mailto:team@chinastartuppulse.com">team@chinastartuppulse.com</a></p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Tue, 10 Sep 2019 00:30:07 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Chinaccelerator)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>To many people in the West, China is thought of as a copyer rather than an innovator. However, according to today's guest Richard Turrin, there are many areas in which China is out-innovating even the most advanced Western countries. Richard says "Innovation is really about people and how they relate to new technologies," and in China both companies and people develop and adopt new technologies at an astonishing rate—they are "some of the best users of technology on the planet."</p><p>This innovation isn't only happening on the tech side, but also in the corporate space. Richard is the former head of IBM’s Cognitive Studio and author of the book ‘Innovation Lab Excellence’, with over 20 years experience in innovation in both China and the West. During this conversation, he also shares insights on why innovation labs become ineffective. Big corporates all around the world are spending massive amounts of resources to connect with startups. Yet, there are still doubts about the tangible impact of many innovation labs.</p><p>Tune in for a provocative conversation on the mistakes innovation labs make, and the differences in attitude towards innovation in the West and China.</p><p>[01:24] Intro of Richard Turrin<br />[02:23] Why some Innovation Labs work well and others don’t<br />[03:40] A short History of Innovation Labs<br />[04:09] Why best-practices are more suitable for Innovation Labs than fixed rules<br />[05:27] Are Innovation Labs unable to attain their goal or are they failing to actually set goals?<br />[06:56] How fear of competition is an obstacle to Innovation Labs<br />[10:41] Innovation in China & Difference in attitude towards innovation in the West and in China<br />[12:02] Chinese companies biggest advantages<br />[15:52] The growing trend of Chinese Innovation aimed at the whole World<br />[19:55] The three major reasons why people might not be thinking about China?<br />[25:29] Difference between R&D and Innovation<br />[28:00] Push vs Pull innovation strategy<br />[30:05] Blockchain in China<br />[32:19] People’s Bank of China supported Cryptocurreny<br />[35:17] Message to companies who are not thinking about China<br />[37:43] Contact Information Richard Turrin</p><p>Many thanks to our host Oscar Ramos, our guest Richard Turrin, editor David and Geep, producer Matthew Wu and Eva Shi, organizer Chinaccelerator and sponsor People Squared. Be sure to check out our website <a href="http://www.chinaccelerator.com">www.chinaccelerator.com</a></p><p>If you like us, please give us a 5-star review and share with your friends!</p><p>Follow us on Linkedin: <a href="http://www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/">www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/</a></p><p>Email us: <a href="mailto:team@chinastartuppulse.com">team@chinastartuppulse.com</a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>How China&apos;s Beating the West in Innovation with Richard Turrin, FinTech expert, author of &quot;Innovation Lab Excellence&quot; and former head of IBM&apos;s Cognitive Studio</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Chinaccelerator</itunes:author>
      <itunes:duration>00:39:32</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>To many people in the West, China is thought of as a copyer rather than an innovator. However, according to today&apos;s guest Richard Turrin, there are many areas in which China is out-innovating even the most advanced Western countries. Richard says &quot;Innovation is really about people and how they relate to new technologies,&quot; and in China, both companies and people develop and adopt new technologies at an astonishing rate—they are &quot;some of the best users of technology on the planet.&quot; 

This innovation isn&apos;t only happening on the tech side, but also in the corporate space. Richard is the former head of IBM’s Cognitive Studio and author of the book ‘Innovation Lab Excellence’, with over 20 years experience in innovation in both China and the West. During this conversation, he also shares insights on why innovation labs become ineffective. Big corporates all around the world are spending massive amounts of resources to connect with startups. Yet, there are still doubts about the tangible impact of many innovation labs. 

Tune in for a provocative conversation on the mistakes innovation labs make, and the differences in attitude towards innovation in the West and China.</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>To many people in the West, China is thought of as a copyer rather than an innovator. However, according to today&apos;s guest Richard Turrin, there are many areas in which China is out-innovating even the most advanced Western countries. Richard says &quot;Innovation is really about people and how they relate to new technologies,&quot; and in China, both companies and people develop and adopt new technologies at an astonishing rate—they are &quot;some of the best users of technology on the planet.&quot; 

This innovation isn&apos;t only happening on the tech side, but also in the corporate space. Richard is the former head of IBM’s Cognitive Studio and author of the book ‘Innovation Lab Excellence’, with over 20 years experience in innovation in both China and the West. During this conversation, he also shares insights on why innovation labs become ineffective. Big corporates all around the world are spending massive amounts of resources to connect with startups. Yet, there are still doubts about the tangible impact of many innovation labs. 

Tune in for a provocative conversation on the mistakes innovation labs make, and the differences in attitude towards innovation in the West and China.</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>early stage, accelerator, cryptocurrency, fintech, china, chinaccelerator, corporate innovation, m, technology, users, venture capital, entrepreneur, innovation, blockchain, startups, innovation lab</itunes:keywords>
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      <title>Investigating Live Streaming&apos;s Social Impact with Hao Wu, Director of &quot;People&apos;s Republic of Desire&quot;</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>Every technology has a human impact. Live streaming is certainly no exception. In China, live streaming platforms have connected millions of viewers with a small number of idols who receive massive amounts of donations—but at what personal cost?</p>
<p>Hao Wu, knows more about the societal impact of live streaming than anyone else on the planet. In his award-winning documentary, People’s Republic of Desire, he explores why live streaming has been so successful in China and examines the effect that these platforms have on both viewers and creators.</p>
<p>In this episode, Hao Wu and Chinaccelerator Managing Director Oscar Ramos cover all aspects of live streaming: from the business models and the future prospects of the industry, to the social consequences of this technology.</p>
<p>Show Notes:<br />
[1:17] Hao Wu’s journey from tech executive to independent filmmaker<br />
[3:50] Introducing Hao Wu’s documentary People’s Republic of Desire<br />
[6:38] Overview of live streaming in China<br />
[7:57] How to become a successful live streamer, and the livestream agency ecosystem<br />
[10:40] Differences between live streaming in China and vlogging in the US<br />
[11:22] The audience: Who’s paying live streamers and why?<br />
[15:00] Live streaming outside of China (US, Middle East, emerging markets)<br />
[18:04] The profitability of live streaming business models in China<br />
[21:43] Misunderstandings that Europeans and Americans have about tech in China<br />
[23:16] Is technology making people happier? Are live streamers happy?<br />
[29:31] Live streaming platforms and regulation<br />
[31:30] Outro and where to find Hao Wu’s documentaries</p>
<p>Many thanks to our host Oscar Ramos; our guest Hao Wu; producers Eva Shi and Matthew Wu; editors David and Geep; organizer Chinaccelerator; sponsors People Squared and Himalaya App. Be sure to check out our website www.chinaccelerator.com</p>
<p>Please take a moment to review and share with your friends!</p>
<p>Follow us on LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/</p>
<p>Email us: team@chinastartuppulse.com</p>
<p>Music Credits: Adam Place founder of NUSIC (https://nusic.fm/)</p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Fri, 23 Aug 2019 03:22:32 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Orbit Startups)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Every technology has a human impact. Live streaming is certainly no exception. In China, live streaming platforms have connected millions of viewers with a small number of idols who receive massive amounts of donations—but at what personal cost?</p>
<p>Hao Wu, knows more about the societal impact of live streaming than anyone else on the planet. In his award-winning documentary, People’s Republic of Desire, he explores why live streaming has been so successful in China and examines the effect that these platforms have on both viewers and creators.</p>
<p>In this episode, Hao Wu and Chinaccelerator Managing Director Oscar Ramos cover all aspects of live streaming: from the business models and the future prospects of the industry, to the social consequences of this technology.</p>
<p>Show Notes:<br />
[1:17] Hao Wu’s journey from tech executive to independent filmmaker<br />
[3:50] Introducing Hao Wu’s documentary People’s Republic of Desire<br />
[6:38] Overview of live streaming in China<br />
[7:57] How to become a successful live streamer, and the livestream agency ecosystem<br />
[10:40] Differences between live streaming in China and vlogging in the US<br />
[11:22] The audience: Who’s paying live streamers and why?<br />
[15:00] Live streaming outside of China (US, Middle East, emerging markets)<br />
[18:04] The profitability of live streaming business models in China<br />
[21:43] Misunderstandings that Europeans and Americans have about tech in China<br />
[23:16] Is technology making people happier? Are live streamers happy?<br />
[29:31] Live streaming platforms and regulation<br />
[31:30] Outro and where to find Hao Wu’s documentaries</p>
<p>Many thanks to our host Oscar Ramos; our guest Hao Wu; producers Eva Shi and Matthew Wu; editors David and Geep; organizer Chinaccelerator; sponsors People Squared and Himalaya App. Be sure to check out our website www.chinaccelerator.com</p>
<p>Please take a moment to review and share with your friends!</p>
<p>Follow us on LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/</p>
<p>Email us: team@chinastartuppulse.com</p>
<p>Music Credits: Adam Place founder of NUSIC (https://nusic.fm/)</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>Investigating Live Streaming&apos;s Social Impact with Hao Wu, Director of &quot;People&apos;s Republic of Desire&quot;</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Orbit Startups</itunes:author>
      <itunes:duration>00:33:59</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>Every technology has a human impact. Live streaming is certainly no exception. In China, live streaming platforms have connected millions of viewers with a small number of idols who receive massive amounts of donations—but at what personal cost? 

Hao Wu, knows more about the societal impact of live streaming than anyone else on the planet. In his award-winning documentary, People’s Republic of Desire, he explores why live streaming has been so successful in China and examines the effect that these platforms have on both viewers and creators.

In this episode, Hao Wu and Chinaccelerator Managing Director Oscar Ramos cover all aspects of live streaming: from the business models and the future prospects of the industry, to the social consequences of this technology. 
</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>Every technology has a human impact. Live streaming is certainly no exception. In China, live streaming platforms have connected millions of viewers with a small number of idols who receive massive amounts of donations—but at what personal cost? 

Hao Wu, knows more about the societal impact of live streaming than anyone else on the planet. In his award-winning documentary, People’s Republic of Desire, he explores why live streaming has been so successful in China and examines the effect that these platforms have on both viewers and creators.

In this episode, Hao Wu and Chinaccelerator Managing Director Oscar Ramos cover all aspects of live streaming: from the business models and the future prospects of the industry, to the social consequences of this technology. 
</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>documentary, social media, technology, film, live streaming, society, hao wu</itunes:keywords>
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      <title>Investing in Interactive Entertainment with Richie Zhu, Partner at Makers Fund</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>In the gaming space, China's strength is taking technological innovation and applying it to the market. This is the claim of Richie Zhu, Partner at Makers Fund and lifelong gamer. Makers Fund is a venture capital fund specializing in the interactive entertainment market, which includes gaming, live-streaming, interactive storytelling, virtual content, and more.</p>
<p>In this episode, Richie and venture capitalist Oscar Ramos take a comprehensive look at China's interactive entertainment industry, with a focus on the gaming space. They discuss how the US-China trade war is impacting the global gaming industry, what technology has high potential to take off in China, and ways that foreign gaming companies can enter China successfully.</p>
<p>Show Notes:<br />
[1:24] Introduce Richie Zhu<br />
[3:22] Makers Fund: investment philosophy and team<br />
[6:47] How to evaluate companies for potential investment<br />
[9:00] China innovation inside the gaming Industry<br />
[10:18] Innovative business models in China<br />
[13:24] Technology with high potential in China<br />
[14:37] AI singularity in the Interactive Entertainment Industry<br />
[15:59] How US-China trade war is impacting the global gaming industry<br />
[17:00] Opportunities for foreign gaming companies to enter China<br />
[18:52] Emerging trends in the gaming industry<br />
[22:17] Get in touch with Richie Zhu</p>
<p>Many thanks to our host Oscar Ramos, our guest Richier Zhu, producer Eva Shi, editor David and Geep, organizer Chinaccelerator and sponsor People Squared. Be sure to check out our website www.chinaccelerator.com</p>
<p>If you like us, please give us a 5-star review and share with your friends!</p>
<p>Follow us on LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/</p>
<p>Email us: team@chinastartuppulse.com</p>
<p>Music Credits: Adam Place founder of NUSIC (https://nusic.fm/)</p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Fri, 16 Aug 2019 03:00:03 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Chinaccelerator)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>In the gaming space, China's strength is taking technological innovation and applying it to the market. This is the claim of Richie Zhu, Partner at Makers Fund and lifelong gamer. Makers Fund is a venture capital fund specializing in the interactive entertainment market, which includes gaming, live-streaming, interactive storytelling, virtual content, and more.</p>
<p>In this episode, Richie and venture capitalist Oscar Ramos take a comprehensive look at China's interactive entertainment industry, with a focus on the gaming space. They discuss how the US-China trade war is impacting the global gaming industry, what technology has high potential to take off in China, and ways that foreign gaming companies can enter China successfully.</p>
<p>Show Notes:<br />
[1:24] Introduce Richie Zhu<br />
[3:22] Makers Fund: investment philosophy and team<br />
[6:47] How to evaluate companies for potential investment<br />
[9:00] China innovation inside the gaming Industry<br />
[10:18] Innovative business models in China<br />
[13:24] Technology with high potential in China<br />
[14:37] AI singularity in the Interactive Entertainment Industry<br />
[15:59] How US-China trade war is impacting the global gaming industry<br />
[17:00] Opportunities for foreign gaming companies to enter China<br />
[18:52] Emerging trends in the gaming industry<br />
[22:17] Get in touch with Richie Zhu</p>
<p>Many thanks to our host Oscar Ramos, our guest Richier Zhu, producer Eva Shi, editor David and Geep, organizer Chinaccelerator and sponsor People Squared. Be sure to check out our website www.chinaccelerator.com</p>
<p>If you like us, please give us a 5-star review and share with your friends!</p>
<p>Follow us on LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/</p>
<p>Email us: team@chinastartuppulse.com</p>
<p>Music Credits: Adam Place founder of NUSIC (https://nusic.fm/)</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>Investing in Interactive Entertainment with Richie Zhu, Partner at Makers Fund</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Chinaccelerator</itunes:author>
      <itunes:duration>00:24:22</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>In the gaming space, China&apos;s strength is taking technological innovation and applying it to the market. This is the claim of Richie Zhu, Partner at Makers Fund and lifelong gamer. Makers Fund is a venture capital fund specializing in the interactive entertainment market, which includes gaming, live-streaming, interactive storytelling, virtual content, and more.

In this episode, Richie and venture capitalist Oscar Ramos take a comprehensive look at China&apos;s interactive entertainment industry, with a focus on the gaming space. They discuss how the US-China trade war is impacting the global gaming industry, what technology has high potential to take off in China, and ways that foreign gaming companies can enter China successfully.</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>In the gaming space, China&apos;s strength is taking technological innovation and applying it to the market. This is the claim of Richie Zhu, Partner at Makers Fund and lifelong gamer. Makers Fund is a venture capital fund specializing in the interactive entertainment market, which includes gaming, live-streaming, interactive storytelling, virtual content, and more.

In this episode, Richie and venture capitalist Oscar Ramos take a comprehensive look at China&apos;s interactive entertainment industry, with a focus on the gaming space. They discuss how the US-China trade war is impacting the global gaming industry, what technology has high potential to take off in China, and ways that foreign gaming companies can enter China successfully.</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>accelerator, virtual content, business model, ai singularity, vc, interactive entertainment, live stream, china, makers fund, storytelling, technology, startup, venture capital, free to play model, innovation, gaming, trade war</itunes:keywords>
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      <title>Understanding Influencer Marketing in China with Hillary Han, Director of iResearch Training Academy</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>Key Opinion Leaders (KOLs)—or &quot;influencers&quot; as they are often called—are a vital part of online marketing today. And their reach is only getting bigger: According to an iResearch report, last year the number of KOLs in China with a fanbase of over 100k was increased by 51%, of which 23% have over 1 million fans. According to Weibo big data, the KOL market is valued at over 100 billion RMB.</p>
<p>The KOL industry in China is more advanced than anywhere else in the world, according to today's guest Hillary Han. Hillary runs a KOL training program at iResearch, one of the country's leading market research firms. In today's episode, we're doing a deep dive into the industry, from the basic concepts, like how brands utilize KOL resources, to practical suggestions about KOL marketing on different platforms. Hillary not only has experience working with many KOLs, but also she is KOL herself, so we're thrilled to have her as our guide to this fascinating topic.</p>
<p>Timestamps:</p>
<p>[01:30] Introducing Hillary Han<br />
[02:30] What is iResearch<br />
[03:19] What is KOL<br />
[04:18] The importance of KOL marketing<br />
[05:48] The differences between Chinese KOLs and Western influencers<br />
[07:30] Monetizing your presence on social platforms in China<br />
[08:58] KOLs signed with MCNs<br />
[10:30] China’s advantage of understanding the KOL industry and the variety of platforms<br />
[13:00] Why there is no Youtube in China<br />
[14:00] The powerful KOLs in China and how much money they make<br />
[16:15] When to use a KOL for your own brand<br />
[22:35] How to choose the right KOL</p>
<p>Many thanks to our host Ryan Shuken, guest Hillary Han, editors David and Geep, producer Eva Shi, organizer Chinaccelerator, and sponsor People Squared. Make sure to check out our website www.chinaccelerator.com</p>
<p>If you like us, please give us a 5-star review and share with your friends!</p>
<p>Follow us on LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/</p>
<p>Email us: team@chinastartuppulse.com</p>
<p>Music Credits: Adam Place founder of NUSIC (https://nusic.fm/)</p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Fri, 9 Aug 2019 03:46:13 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Chinaccelerator)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Key Opinion Leaders (KOLs)—or &quot;influencers&quot; as they are often called—are a vital part of online marketing today. And their reach is only getting bigger: According to an iResearch report, last year the number of KOLs in China with a fanbase of over 100k was increased by 51%, of which 23% have over 1 million fans. According to Weibo big data, the KOL market is valued at over 100 billion RMB.</p>
<p>The KOL industry in China is more advanced than anywhere else in the world, according to today's guest Hillary Han. Hillary runs a KOL training program at iResearch, one of the country's leading market research firms. In today's episode, we're doing a deep dive into the industry, from the basic concepts, like how brands utilize KOL resources, to practical suggestions about KOL marketing on different platforms. Hillary not only has experience working with many KOLs, but also she is KOL herself, so we're thrilled to have her as our guide to this fascinating topic.</p>
<p>Timestamps:</p>
<p>[01:30] Introducing Hillary Han<br />
[02:30] What is iResearch<br />
[03:19] What is KOL<br />
[04:18] The importance of KOL marketing<br />
[05:48] The differences between Chinese KOLs and Western influencers<br />
[07:30] Monetizing your presence on social platforms in China<br />
[08:58] KOLs signed with MCNs<br />
[10:30] China’s advantage of understanding the KOL industry and the variety of platforms<br />
[13:00] Why there is no Youtube in China<br />
[14:00] The powerful KOLs in China and how much money they make<br />
[16:15] When to use a KOL for your own brand<br />
[22:35] How to choose the right KOL</p>
<p>Many thanks to our host Ryan Shuken, guest Hillary Han, editors David and Geep, producer Eva Shi, organizer Chinaccelerator, and sponsor People Squared. Make sure to check out our website www.chinaccelerator.com</p>
<p>If you like us, please give us a 5-star review and share with your friends!</p>
<p>Follow us on LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/</p>
<p>Email us: team@chinastartuppulse.com</p>
<p>Music Credits: Adam Place founder of NUSIC (https://nusic.fm/)</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>Understanding Influencer Marketing in China with Hillary Han, Director of iResearch Training Academy</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Chinaccelerator</itunes:author>
      <itunes:duration>00:26:53</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>Key Opinion Leaders (KOLs)—or &quot;influencers&quot; as they are often called—are a vital part of online marketing today. And their reach is only getting bigger: According to an iResearch report, last year the number of KOLs in China with a fanbase of over 100k was increased by 51%, of which 23% have over 1 million fans. According to Weibo big data, the KOL market is valued at over 100 billion RMB. 

The KOL industry in China is more advanced than anywhere else in the world, according to today&apos;s guest Hillary Han. Hillary runs a KOL training program at iResearch, one of the country&apos;s leading market research firms. In today&apos;s episode, we&apos;re doing a deep dive into the industry, from the basic concepts, like how brands utilize KOL resources, to practical suggestions about KOL marketing on different platforms. Hillary not only has experience working with many KOLs, but also she is KOL herself, so we&apos;re thrilled to have her as our guide to this fascinating topic.</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>Key Opinion Leaders (KOLs)—or &quot;influencers&quot; as they are often called—are a vital part of online marketing today. And their reach is only getting bigger: According to an iResearch report, last year the number of KOLs in China with a fanbase of over 100k was increased by 51%, of which 23% have over 1 million fans. According to Weibo big data, the KOL market is valued at over 100 billion RMB. 

The KOL industry in China is more advanced than anywhere else in the world, according to today&apos;s guest Hillary Han. Hillary runs a KOL training program at iResearch, one of the country&apos;s leading market research firms. In today&apos;s episode, we&apos;re doing a deep dive into the industry, from the basic concepts, like how brands utilize KOL resources, to practical suggestions about KOL marketing on different platforms. Hillary not only has experience working with many KOLs, but also she is KOL herself, so we&apos;re thrilled to have her as our guide to this fascinating topic.</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>accelerator, marketing, brand, vc, influencer, china, kol, tiktok, chinaccelerator, social media, venture capital, market research, key opinion leader, douyin, kuaishou, iresearch, youtube</itunes:keywords>
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      <title>Growth Hacking an Audio Sharing Platform with Tian Sun, Vice President of Business Intelligence Center at Ximalaya App</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>Getting your app off the ground in China is tough. No matter what industry, internet companies not only need to have a great product, but they also must use data, analytics, and growth hacking to gain an advantage on the competition.</p>
<p>In this area, there are plenty of lessons to learn from Ximalaya App, the biggest audio sharing platform in China with 530 million users and 73% market share. This podcast platform and content marketplace has dominated the Chinese “pay-for-knowledge” industry, which last year was valued at seven billion USD. A crucial reason for Ximalaya’s success is their smart use of data, from extensive A/B testing to an almost obsessive analysis of usage and bounce rates.</p>
<p>At the center of this effort is Tian Sun, the Vice President of Business Intelligence Center at Ximalaya App. She has spearheaded Ximalaya’s efforts to utilize data on a daily basis to improve their app’s user experience and help creators make great content. This is a great conversation for anyone interested in how an industry-leading company is using data in exciting and efficient ways.</p>
<p>Timestamps:<br />
[02:36] Introducing Tian Sun<br />
[03:42] What is Ximalaya?<br />
[05:49] What makes podcasting in China different?<br />
[06:51] How people use Ximalaya<br />
[07:54] How Ximalaya uses data, analytics, and growth hacking<br />
[10:44] Using data and A/B testing to improve the customer experience<br />
[12:18] Data and customer acquisition<br />
[14:09] How Ximalaya launched a paid content marketplace and how young Chinese people consume content<br />
[18:14] The rise of audiobooks, micro-lessons, and more<br />
[19:54] Steps Ximalaya took to succeed in the “pay-for-knowledge” industry<br />
[23:38] How platforms help content creators and KOLs<br />
[25:29] Biggest trends in podcasting in China<br />
[26:49] The future of Ximalaya and a new AI speaker</p>
<p>Contact Tian Sun at LinkedIn:  www.linkedin.com/in/tian-sun-17243485</p>
<p>Many thanks to our host Ryan Shuken, guest Tian Sun, editors David and Geep, producer Eva Shi, organizer Chinaccelerator, and sponsor People Squared. Be sure to check out our website www.chinaccelerator.com</p>
<p>If you like us, please give us a 5-star review and share with your friends!</p>
<p>Follow us on LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/</p>
<p>Email us: team@chinastartuppulse.com</p>
<p>Music Credits: Adam Place founder of <a href="https://nusic.com.cn/">NUSIC</a></p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Fri, 2 Aug 2019 03:01:20 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Chinaccelerator)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Getting your app off the ground in China is tough. No matter what industry, internet companies not only need to have a great product, but they also must use data, analytics, and growth hacking to gain an advantage on the competition.</p>
<p>In this area, there are plenty of lessons to learn from Ximalaya App, the biggest audio sharing platform in China with 530 million users and 73% market share. This podcast platform and content marketplace has dominated the Chinese “pay-for-knowledge” industry, which last year was valued at seven billion USD. A crucial reason for Ximalaya’s success is their smart use of data, from extensive A/B testing to an almost obsessive analysis of usage and bounce rates.</p>
<p>At the center of this effort is Tian Sun, the Vice President of Business Intelligence Center at Ximalaya App. She has spearheaded Ximalaya’s efforts to utilize data on a daily basis to improve their app’s user experience and help creators make great content. This is a great conversation for anyone interested in how an industry-leading company is using data in exciting and efficient ways.</p>
<p>Timestamps:<br />
[02:36] Introducing Tian Sun<br />
[03:42] What is Ximalaya?<br />
[05:49] What makes podcasting in China different?<br />
[06:51] How people use Ximalaya<br />
[07:54] How Ximalaya uses data, analytics, and growth hacking<br />
[10:44] Using data and A/B testing to improve the customer experience<br />
[12:18] Data and customer acquisition<br />
[14:09] How Ximalaya launched a paid content marketplace and how young Chinese people consume content<br />
[18:14] The rise of audiobooks, micro-lessons, and more<br />
[19:54] Steps Ximalaya took to succeed in the “pay-for-knowledge” industry<br />
[23:38] How platforms help content creators and KOLs<br />
[25:29] Biggest trends in podcasting in China<br />
[26:49] The future of Ximalaya and a new AI speaker</p>
<p>Contact Tian Sun at LinkedIn:  www.linkedin.com/in/tian-sun-17243485</p>
<p>Many thanks to our host Ryan Shuken, guest Tian Sun, editors David and Geep, producer Eva Shi, organizer Chinaccelerator, and sponsor People Squared. Be sure to check out our website www.chinaccelerator.com</p>
<p>If you like us, please give us a 5-star review and share with your friends!</p>
<p>Follow us on LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/</p>
<p>Email us: team@chinastartuppulse.com</p>
<p>Music Credits: Adam Place founder of <a href="https://nusic.com.cn/">NUSIC</a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>Growth Hacking an Audio Sharing Platform with Tian Sun, Vice President of Business Intelligence Center at Ximalaya App</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Chinaccelerator</itunes:author>
      <itunes:duration>00:30:00</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>Getting your app off the ground in China is tough. No matter what industry, internet companies not only need to have a great product, but they also must use data, analytics, and growth hacking to gain an advantage on the competition. 

In this area, there are plenty of lessons to learn from Ximalaya App, the biggest audio sharing platform in China with 530 million users and 73% market share. This podcast platform and content marketplace has dominated the Chinese “pay-for-knowledge” industry, which last year was valued at seven billion USD. A crucial reason for Ximalaya’s success is their smart use of data, from extensive A/B testing to an almost obsessive analysis of usage and bounce rates.

At the center of this effort is Tian Sun, the Vice President of Business Intelligence Center at Ximalaya App. She has spearheaded Ximalaya’s efforts to utilize data on a daily basis to improve their app’s user experience and help creators make great content. This is a great conversation for anyone interested in how an industry-leading company is using data in exciting and efficient ways. 
</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>Getting your app off the ground in China is tough. No matter what industry, internet companies not only need to have a great product, but they also must use data, analytics, and growth hacking to gain an advantage on the competition. 

In this area, there are plenty of lessons to learn from Ximalaya App, the biggest audio sharing platform in China with 530 million users and 73% market share. This podcast platform and content marketplace has dominated the Chinese “pay-for-knowledge” industry, which last year was valued at seven billion USD. A crucial reason for Ximalaya’s success is their smart use of data, from extensive A/B testing to an almost obsessive analysis of usage and bounce rates.

At the center of this effort is Tian Sun, the Vice President of Business Intelligence Center at Ximalaya App. She has spearheaded Ximalaya’s efforts to utilize data on a daily basis to improve their app’s user experience and help creators make great content. This is a great conversation for anyone interested in how an industry-leading company is using data in exciting and efficient ways. 
</itunes:subtitle>
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      <title>The Making of Airbnb’s China Dream with Sean Pan, Head of China Operations at Airbnb</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>Many foreign startups have tried to enter China, most have failed, yet a minority have flourished. Airbnb is one of the few living the China Dream, as after only 4 years it is winning the China home-sharing market.</p>
<p>In this episode, we invited Sean Pan, Head of China Operations at Airbnb, who has overlooked Airbnb’s transformation in their strategy, management system and branding since 2015, when Airbnb only had 6 people in the China team. As he mentioned, one obstacle confronted by many foreign companies who want to localize in China is the communication problem between the global and China team. How does Airbnb put efforts into that and build up the trust internally? Find the answer in this episode!</p>
<p>Show Notes:<br />
[01:26] Introduction of Sean<br />
[05:33] The Philosophy behind Airbnb’s office in Beijing<br />
[06:30] Building and maintaining Airbnb’s unique Culture in China<br />
[08:09] How to foster commitment to China from global Team?<br />
[12:00] Key finding for Airbnb’s success<br />
[15:38] Managing the relation with head-quarters<br />
[16:12] Evolution of Airbnb’s China strategy<br />
[18:03] Creating a China specific brand<br />
[22:38] Challenge foreign entrepreneurs are facing in China<br />
[26:00] Is there an opportunity for foreign companies in China?</p>
<p>Many thanks to our host Oscar Ramos, guest Sean Pan, editor David and Geep, producer Eva Shi, organizer Chinaccelerator and sponsor People Squared. Be sure to check out our website www.chinaccelerator.com</p>
<p>If you like us, please give us a 5-star review and share with your friends!</p>
<p>Follow us on Linkedin: www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/</p>
<p>Email us: team@chinastartuppulse.com<br />
Music Credits: Adam Place founder of NUSIC (https://nusic.com.cn/)</p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Fri, 19 Jul 2019 03:00:05 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Chinaccelerator)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Many foreign startups have tried to enter China, most have failed, yet a minority have flourished. Airbnb is one of the few living the China Dream, as after only 4 years it is winning the China home-sharing market.</p>
<p>In this episode, we invited Sean Pan, Head of China Operations at Airbnb, who has overlooked Airbnb’s transformation in their strategy, management system and branding since 2015, when Airbnb only had 6 people in the China team. As he mentioned, one obstacle confronted by many foreign companies who want to localize in China is the communication problem between the global and China team. How does Airbnb put efforts into that and build up the trust internally? Find the answer in this episode!</p>
<p>Show Notes:<br />
[01:26] Introduction of Sean<br />
[05:33] The Philosophy behind Airbnb’s office in Beijing<br />
[06:30] Building and maintaining Airbnb’s unique Culture in China<br />
[08:09] How to foster commitment to China from global Team?<br />
[12:00] Key finding for Airbnb’s success<br />
[15:38] Managing the relation with head-quarters<br />
[16:12] Evolution of Airbnb’s China strategy<br />
[18:03] Creating a China specific brand<br />
[22:38] Challenge foreign entrepreneurs are facing in China<br />
[26:00] Is there an opportunity for foreign companies in China?</p>
<p>Many thanks to our host Oscar Ramos, guest Sean Pan, editor David and Geep, producer Eva Shi, organizer Chinaccelerator and sponsor People Squared. Be sure to check out our website www.chinaccelerator.com</p>
<p>If you like us, please give us a 5-star review and share with your friends!</p>
<p>Follow us on Linkedin: www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/</p>
<p>Email us: team@chinastartuppulse.com<br />
Music Credits: Adam Place founder of NUSIC (https://nusic.com.cn/)</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>The Making of Airbnb’s China Dream with Sean Pan, Head of China Operations at Airbnb</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Chinaccelerator</itunes:author>
      <itunes:duration>00:29:08</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>Many foreign startups have tried to enter China, most have failed, yet a minority have flourished. Airbnb is one of the few living the China Dream, as after only 4 years it is winning the China home-sharing market. 

In this episode, we invited Sean Pan, Head of China Operations at Airbnb, who has overlooked Airbnb’s transformation in their strategy, management system and branding since 2015, when Airbnb only had 6 people in the China team. As he mentioned, one obstacle confronted by many foreign companies who want to localize in China is the communication problem between the global and China team. How does Airbnb put efforts into that and build up the trust internally? Find the answer in this episode!</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>Many foreign startups have tried to enter China, most have failed, yet a minority have flourished. Airbnb is one of the few living the China Dream, as after only 4 years it is winning the China home-sharing market. 

In this episode, we invited Sean Pan, Head of China Operations at Airbnb, who has overlooked Airbnb’s transformation in their strategy, management system and branding since 2015, when Airbnb only had 6 people in the China team. As he mentioned, one obstacle confronted by many foreign companies who want to localize in China is the communication problem between the global and China team. How does Airbnb put efforts into that and build up the trust internally? Find the answer in this episode!</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>accelerator, localizatin, china startup pulse, operations, china, sean pan, chinaccelerator, airbnb, startup, entrepreneur, home-sharing, communication, foreign startups, airbnb china, company culture</itunes:keywords>
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      <title>Creating a &quot;Great Place to Work&quot; with Alicia Tung, Chief Operating Officer at Great Place to Work, Greater China</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>996, 9am to 9pm, 6 days a week. You must have heard about 996 a lot in the past few months. This buzz has triggered discussion around the balance between work and life, employee engagement, productivity and the working environment, etc.</p>
<p>“996 is a signal of going backward, not forward,” said today’s guest Alicia Tung, Chief Operating Officer at Great Place to Work, Greater China. She stressed the importance of having a clear value and purpose to motivate employees in their work and pointed out the fact that 996 working hours are not necessarily leading to better efficiency. Alicia shared her observations about the working environment differences in China and overseas countries, how overseas entrepreneurs can fit into Chinese working culture and how founders can create a great place to work for their employees.</p>
<p>Founded in 1990, Great Place to Work is a global people analytics and consulting firm that helps companies of all sizes produce better business results by focusing on the work experience for every employee.</p>
<p>Show notes:<br />
[01:29] Introduction of Alicia and Great Place to Work<br />
[04:13] Having the right reasons before starting a business<br />
[05:28] Understanding/Identifying the concepts: co-working space vs shared office<br />
[06:47] How different is Great Place to Work in China and the rest of the world?<br />
[08:21] Same value, different implementations<br />
[11:18] How does the profile of those companies who care for their employees change over time?<br />
[13:02] Challenges and concerns for local companies<br />
[20:28] The magic number: 996<br />
[23:57] Does 996 achieve efficiency?<br />
[26:10] Opportunities and challenges for international startups coming to China<br />
[29:35] Best places to work in China<br />
[30:27] Creating an open working environment for women in China</p>
<p>Many thanks to our host Oscar Ramos, guest Alicia Tung, editor David and Geep, producer Eva Shi, organizer Chinaccelerator and sponsor People Squared. Be sure to check out our website www.chinaccelerator.com</p>
<p>Contact Alicia Tung: www.linkedin.com/in/aliciatung/</p>
<p>If you like us, please give us a 5-star review and share the favorite moment with your friends!<br />
Check more exciting episodes on Linkedin: www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/</p>
<p>Email us: team@chinastartuppulse.com<br />
Music Credits: Adam Place founder of NUSIC (https://nusic.com.cn/)</p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Fri, 12 Jul 2019 03:00:03 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Chinaccelerator)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>996, 9am to 9pm, 6 days a week. You must have heard about 996 a lot in the past few months. This buzz has triggered discussion around the balance between work and life, employee engagement, productivity and the working environment, etc.</p>
<p>“996 is a signal of going backward, not forward,” said today’s guest Alicia Tung, Chief Operating Officer at Great Place to Work, Greater China. She stressed the importance of having a clear value and purpose to motivate employees in their work and pointed out the fact that 996 working hours are not necessarily leading to better efficiency. Alicia shared her observations about the working environment differences in China and overseas countries, how overseas entrepreneurs can fit into Chinese working culture and how founders can create a great place to work for their employees.</p>
<p>Founded in 1990, Great Place to Work is a global people analytics and consulting firm that helps companies of all sizes produce better business results by focusing on the work experience for every employee.</p>
<p>Show notes:<br />
[01:29] Introduction of Alicia and Great Place to Work<br />
[04:13] Having the right reasons before starting a business<br />
[05:28] Understanding/Identifying the concepts: co-working space vs shared office<br />
[06:47] How different is Great Place to Work in China and the rest of the world?<br />
[08:21] Same value, different implementations<br />
[11:18] How does the profile of those companies who care for their employees change over time?<br />
[13:02] Challenges and concerns for local companies<br />
[20:28] The magic number: 996<br />
[23:57] Does 996 achieve efficiency?<br />
[26:10] Opportunities and challenges for international startups coming to China<br />
[29:35] Best places to work in China<br />
[30:27] Creating an open working environment for women in China</p>
<p>Many thanks to our host Oscar Ramos, guest Alicia Tung, editor David and Geep, producer Eva Shi, organizer Chinaccelerator and sponsor People Squared. Be sure to check out our website www.chinaccelerator.com</p>
<p>Contact Alicia Tung: www.linkedin.com/in/aliciatung/</p>
<p>If you like us, please give us a 5-star review and share the favorite moment with your friends!<br />
Check more exciting episodes on Linkedin: www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/</p>
<p>Email us: team@chinastartuppulse.com<br />
Music Credits: Adam Place founder of NUSIC (https://nusic.com.cn/)</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>Creating a &quot;Great Place to Work&quot; with Alicia Tung, Chief Operating Officer at Great Place to Work, Greater China</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Chinaccelerator</itunes:author>
      <itunes:duration>00:39:28</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>996, 9am to 9pm, 6 days a week. You must have heard about 996 a lot in the past few months. This buzz has triggered discussion around the balance between work and life, employee engagement, productivity and the working environment, etc. 

“996 is a signal of going backward, not forward,” said today’s guest Alicia Tung, Chief Operating Officer at Great Place to Work, Greater China. She stressed the importance of having a clear value and purpose to motivate employees in their work and pointed out the fact that 996 working hours are not necessarily leading to better efficiency. Alicia shared her observations about the working environment differences in China and overseas countries, how overseas entrepreneurs can fit into Chinese working culture and how founders can create a great place to work for their employees.

Founded in 1990, Great Place to Work is a global people analytics and consulting firm that helps companies of all sizes produce better business results by focusing on the work experience for every employee. 
</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>996, 9am to 9pm, 6 days a week. You must have heard about 996 a lot in the past few months. This buzz has triggered discussion around the balance between work and life, employee engagement, productivity and the working environment, etc. 

“996 is a signal of going backward, not forward,” said today’s guest Alicia Tung, Chief Operating Officer at Great Place to Work, Greater China. She stressed the importance of having a clear value and purpose to motivate employees in their work and pointed out the fact that 996 working hours are not necessarily leading to better efficiency. Alicia shared her observations about the working environment differences in China and overseas countries, how overseas entrepreneurs can fit into Chinese working culture and how founders can create a great place to work for their employees.

Founded in 1990, Great Place to Work is a global people analytics and consulting firm that helps companies of all sizes produce better business results by focusing on the work experience for every employee. 
</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>996, accelerator, entrepreneurship, china, chinaccelerator, sosv, startup, entrepreneur, employee, work environment, career, work</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:episode>105</itunes:episode>
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      <title>Playing to Create a Mentally Healthy World with Enoch Li, Founder of BEARAPY</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>“I was feeling completely drained, drained of energy and mental strength. Just being empty going through the days trying to cope with my daily work.” This is just one story we heard from entrepreneurs. While entrepreneurs are determined to change the world, they often don’t realize they are losing sleep and endangering their mental well-being during the process. Even worse, societal stigmas surrounding depression and anxiety prevent them from acknowledging their symptoms, much less getting the help they need.</p>
<p>In this episode, we invited Enoch Li, author of &quot;Stress in the City: Playing My Way Out of Depression” and Founder of BEARAPY to share her own struggles with mental health and the importance of taking care of employees' mental wellbeing. Mentors and investors also need to take on the role of creating a healthy environment for entrepreneurs.</p>
<p>BEARAPY was founded with the mission to reduce burnout and mental health issues in the community through helping adults access their inner playfulness. Their work with startups and small companies and how to implement a healthy workplace culture, what it means to be playful in the company and what it means to care about mental health of employees can be found in Enoch’s book.</p>
<p>Show Notes:</p>
<ul>
<li>[01:40] Introduction of Enoch and BEARAPY</li>
<li>[03:23] The idea behind BEARAPY and its contribution to the community</li>
<li>[04:34] Burnout and mental health challenges in China</li>
<li>[05:57] Lack of awareness in China inhibits mental health care</li>
<li>[07:15] Traditional Chinese approach to mental health</li>
<li>[08:00] China “996” culture results in what consequences and impact</li>
<li>[10:38] High turnover affects the awareness of mental healthcare in business</li>
<li>[12:21] Mental health and wellness responsibility: employee or organization?</li>
<li>[13:58] How to recognize mental health problems</li>
<li>[15:32] Individual approach to cultivating wellbeing for entrepreneurs</li>
<li>[17:27] Redefining and using ‘play’ for positive mental health</li>
<li>[23:30] Investor role in mental health and wellbeing</li>
<li>[29:57] Check out Enoch’s book: &quot;Stress in the City: Playing My Way Out of Depression”( http://bearapy.me/books/)</li>
</ul>
<p>To connect with Enoch and BEARAPY, follow the WeChat account Bearapy小熊创意法.</p>
<p>Many thanks to our host Ryan Shuken and Oscar Ramos, guest Enoch Li, editor David and Geep, producer Eva Shi, organizer Chinaccelerator and sponsor People Squared. Be sure to check out our website www.chinaccelerator.com</p>
<p>If you like us, please give us a 5-star review and share with your friends!</p>
<p>Follow us on Linkedin: www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/<br />
Email us: team@chinastartuppulse.com<br />
Music Credits: Adam Place founder of NUSIC (https://nusic.com.cn/)</p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Thu, 4 Jul 2019 03:00:20 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Chinaccelerator)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>“I was feeling completely drained, drained of energy and mental strength. Just being empty going through the days trying to cope with my daily work.” This is just one story we heard from entrepreneurs. While entrepreneurs are determined to change the world, they often don’t realize they are losing sleep and endangering their mental well-being during the process. Even worse, societal stigmas surrounding depression and anxiety prevent them from acknowledging their symptoms, much less getting the help they need.</p>
<p>In this episode, we invited Enoch Li, author of &quot;Stress in the City: Playing My Way Out of Depression” and Founder of BEARAPY to share her own struggles with mental health and the importance of taking care of employees' mental wellbeing. Mentors and investors also need to take on the role of creating a healthy environment for entrepreneurs.</p>
<p>BEARAPY was founded with the mission to reduce burnout and mental health issues in the community through helping adults access their inner playfulness. Their work with startups and small companies and how to implement a healthy workplace culture, what it means to be playful in the company and what it means to care about mental health of employees can be found in Enoch’s book.</p>
<p>Show Notes:</p>
<ul>
<li>[01:40] Introduction of Enoch and BEARAPY</li>
<li>[03:23] The idea behind BEARAPY and its contribution to the community</li>
<li>[04:34] Burnout and mental health challenges in China</li>
<li>[05:57] Lack of awareness in China inhibits mental health care</li>
<li>[07:15] Traditional Chinese approach to mental health</li>
<li>[08:00] China “996” culture results in what consequences and impact</li>
<li>[10:38] High turnover affects the awareness of mental healthcare in business</li>
<li>[12:21] Mental health and wellness responsibility: employee or organization?</li>
<li>[13:58] How to recognize mental health problems</li>
<li>[15:32] Individual approach to cultivating wellbeing for entrepreneurs</li>
<li>[17:27] Redefining and using ‘play’ for positive mental health</li>
<li>[23:30] Investor role in mental health and wellbeing</li>
<li>[29:57] Check out Enoch’s book: &quot;Stress in the City: Playing My Way Out of Depression”( http://bearapy.me/books/)</li>
</ul>
<p>To connect with Enoch and BEARAPY, follow the WeChat account Bearapy小熊创意法.</p>
<p>Many thanks to our host Ryan Shuken and Oscar Ramos, guest Enoch Li, editor David and Geep, producer Eva Shi, organizer Chinaccelerator and sponsor People Squared. Be sure to check out our website www.chinaccelerator.com</p>
<p>If you like us, please give us a 5-star review and share with your friends!</p>
<p>Follow us on Linkedin: www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/<br />
Email us: team@chinastartuppulse.com<br />
Music Credits: Adam Place founder of NUSIC (https://nusic.com.cn/)</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>Playing to Create a Mentally Healthy World with Enoch Li, Founder of BEARAPY</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Chinaccelerator</itunes:author>
      <itunes:duration>00:33:48</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>“I was feeling completely drained, drained of energy and mental strength. Just being empty going through the days trying to cope with my daily work.” This is just one story we heard from entrepreneurs. While entrepreneurs are determined to change the world, they often don’t realize they are losing sleep and endangering their mental well-being during the process. Even worse, societal stigmas surrounding depression and anxiety prevent them from acknowledging their symptoms, much less getting the help they need.

In this episode, we invited Enoch Li, author of &quot;Stress in the City: Playing My Way Out of Depression” and Founder of BEARAPY to share her own struggles with mental health and the importance of taking care of employees&apos; mental wellbeing. Mentors and investors also need to take on the role of creating a healthy environment for entrepreneurs. 

BEARAPY was founded with the mission to reduce burnout and mental health issues in the community through helping adults access their inner playfulness. Their work with startups and small companies and how to implement a healthy workplace culture, what it means to be playful in the company and what it means to care about mental health of employees can be found in Enoch’s book.</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>“I was feeling completely drained, drained of energy and mental strength. Just being empty going through the days trying to cope with my daily work.” This is just one story we heard from entrepreneurs. While entrepreneurs are determined to change the world, they often don’t realize they are losing sleep and endangering their mental well-being during the process. Even worse, societal stigmas surrounding depression and anxiety prevent them from acknowledging their symptoms, much less getting the help they need.

In this episode, we invited Enoch Li, author of &quot;Stress in the City: Playing My Way Out of Depression” and Founder of BEARAPY to share her own struggles with mental health and the importance of taking care of employees&apos; mental wellbeing. Mentors and investors also need to take on the role of creating a healthy environment for entrepreneurs. 

BEARAPY was founded with the mission to reduce burnout and mental health issues in the community through helping adults access their inner playfulness. Their work with startups and small companies and how to implement a healthy workplace culture, what it means to be playful in the company and what it means to care about mental health of employees can be found in Enoch’s book.</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>china startup pulse, vc, china, healthcare, chinaccelerator, venture capital, startups, entrepreneurs, culture, burn out, mental health, depression, mental wellbeing, enoch li, workplace</itunes:keywords>
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      <title>Entering the Realm of Co-working Space in China with Yintao Feng, Founder and CEO of MIXPACE</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>Random seating at the hot desk area, flexible working style in a diverse environment and open interactions in a borderless office – these are just the tip of the iceberg as to what a co-working space actually entails! In this episode, Yintao Feng, Founder of MIXPACE, a Chinese co-working space brand, will give us a detailed breakdown of the co-working landscape and people’s working experience in China.</p>
<p>To curate a well-connected community is not something you can do with a snap of your fingers. In China, the situation is very different from the west. You need an active community manager to orchestrate these activities and break down several layers of ice before people are comfortable with one another. This interaction is vital as most of the guys there are street-smart and resourceful when it comes to dealing with the challenges in today’s market.</p>
<p>Currently, MIXPACE has more than 20 sites in Shanghai and Beijing with more in the pipeline. MIXPACE received A round investment in 2017 and B round investment of 400 million RMB in 2018.</p>
<p>Show notes:</p>
<p>[01:53] Introducing Yintao Feng</p>
<p>[04:28] His perspectives on starting a company in China</p>
<p>[05:18] Rising trend of urbanization</p>
<p>[06:57] Connecting to Chinese customers with new technology</p>
<p>[08:32] Biggest mental shift from corporate to startup</p>
<p>[09:55] Comparing rules and regulations inside and outside of China</p>
<p>[10:57] His unusual transition from banking to co-working space</p>
<p>[13:05] Catching a glimpse of the co-working scene in China</p>
<p>[16:14] What are the benefits for small companies?</p>
<p>[18:53] Bringing attention to the “996” phenomenon</p>
<p>[20:35] Switching of working style from corporate to startup</p>
<p>[22:15] Having more interactions: helpful or harmful?</p>
<p>[25:05] Lets talk about the second tier cities</p>
<p>[26:28] Improving user’s experience through technology</p>
<p>Many thanks to our host Ryan Shuken and Oscar Ramos, guest Yintao Feng, editor David and Geep, producer Eva Shi, organizer Chinaccelerator and sponsor People Squared. Be sure to check out our website www.chinaccelerator.com</p>
<p>If you like us, please give us a 5-star review and share with your friends!</p>
<p>Follow us on Linkedin: www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/</p>
<p>Email us: team@chinastartuppulse.com</p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Fri, 17 May 2019 04:10:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Chinaccelerator)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Random seating at the hot desk area, flexible working style in a diverse environment and open interactions in a borderless office – these are just the tip of the iceberg as to what a co-working space actually entails! In this episode, Yintao Feng, Founder of MIXPACE, a Chinese co-working space brand, will give us a detailed breakdown of the co-working landscape and people’s working experience in China.</p>
<p>To curate a well-connected community is not something you can do with a snap of your fingers. In China, the situation is very different from the west. You need an active community manager to orchestrate these activities and break down several layers of ice before people are comfortable with one another. This interaction is vital as most of the guys there are street-smart and resourceful when it comes to dealing with the challenges in today’s market.</p>
<p>Currently, MIXPACE has more than 20 sites in Shanghai and Beijing with more in the pipeline. MIXPACE received A round investment in 2017 and B round investment of 400 million RMB in 2018.</p>
<p>Show notes:</p>
<p>[01:53] Introducing Yintao Feng</p>
<p>[04:28] His perspectives on starting a company in China</p>
<p>[05:18] Rising trend of urbanization</p>
<p>[06:57] Connecting to Chinese customers with new technology</p>
<p>[08:32] Biggest mental shift from corporate to startup</p>
<p>[09:55] Comparing rules and regulations inside and outside of China</p>
<p>[10:57] His unusual transition from banking to co-working space</p>
<p>[13:05] Catching a glimpse of the co-working scene in China</p>
<p>[16:14] What are the benefits for small companies?</p>
<p>[18:53] Bringing attention to the “996” phenomenon</p>
<p>[20:35] Switching of working style from corporate to startup</p>
<p>[22:15] Having more interactions: helpful or harmful?</p>
<p>[25:05] Lets talk about the second tier cities</p>
<p>[26:28] Improving user’s experience through technology</p>
<p>Many thanks to our host Ryan Shuken and Oscar Ramos, guest Yintao Feng, editor David and Geep, producer Eva Shi, organizer Chinaccelerator and sponsor People Squared. Be sure to check out our website www.chinaccelerator.com</p>
<p>If you like us, please give us a 5-star review and share with your friends!</p>
<p>Follow us on Linkedin: www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/</p>
<p>Email us: team@chinastartuppulse.com</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>Entering the Realm of Co-working Space in China with Yintao Feng, Founder and CEO of MIXPACE</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Chinaccelerator</itunes:author>
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      <itunes:duration>00:29:47</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>Random seating at the hot desk area, flexible working style in a diverse environment and open interactions in a borderless office – these are just the tip of the iceberg as to what a co-working space actually entails! In this episode, Yintao Feng, Founder of MIXPACE, a Chinese co-working space brand, will give us a detailed breakdown of the co-working landscape and people’s working experience in China.

To curate a well-connected community is not something you can do with a snap of your fingers. In China, the situation is very different from the west. You need an active community manager to orchestrate these activities and break down several layers of ice before people are comfortable with one another. This interaction is vital as most of the guys there are street-smart and resourceful when it comes to dealing with the challenges in today’s market.  

Currently, MIXPACE has more than 20 sites in Shanghai and Beijing with more in the pipeline. MIXPACE received A round investment in 2017 and B round investment of 400 million RMB in 2018.</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>Random seating at the hot desk area, flexible working style in a diverse environment and open interactions in a borderless office – these are just the tip of the iceberg as to what a co-working space actually entails! In this episode, Yintao Feng, Founder of MIXPACE, a Chinese co-working space brand, will give us a detailed breakdown of the co-working landscape and people’s working experience in China.

To curate a well-connected community is not something you can do with a snap of your fingers. In China, the situation is very different from the west. You need an active community manager to orchestrate these activities and break down several layers of ice before people are comfortable with one another. This interaction is vital as most of the guys there are street-smart and resourceful when it comes to dealing with the challenges in today’s market.  

Currently, MIXPACE has more than 20 sites in Shanghai and Beijing with more in the pipeline. MIXPACE received A round investment in 2017 and B round investment of 400 million RMB in 2018.</itunes:subtitle>
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      <title>Building a Holistic Ideal Experience for Your Customers with Michael Lai, PhD, Dean of X Academy &amp; Partner at TANG</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>More thoughts are required when cultivating the relationship between the brands and users, from a level of “friendship” to being part of a one big “family”. As such, how can businesses deliver better experiences in this environment? Our guest Michael Lai has a diverse background with over 10 years of consulting experience in the areas of branding, interaction design, service design, and experience design. We will learn more from this interview in terms of how he understands the importance of segmenting your customers, maintaining your perspective and moving at the right speed in today’s society.</p>
<p>TANG is an experience strategy and design consultancy focusing on helping clients build a holistic ideal experience for their customers, whose clients have included Fortune 500 companies, startups, nonprofit organizations from financial, consumer electronics, automotive, and education industries.</p>
<p>Show notes:</p>
<p>[03:38] Introduction of TANG</p>
<p>[08:36] Desire for “consumption upgrade”</p>
<p>[11:35] Maintaining your perspective in a fast-paced society</p>
<p>[15:25] Most interesting learning from Michael’s book: “The relationship model”</p>
<p>[18:16] Human resources vs technology component in China</p>
<p>[21:03] Innovate in China, implement it elsewhere out of China</p>
<p>[23:50] Types of companies that are working with TANG</p>
<p>[28:04] Moving at the right speed: speeding up or slowing down  </p>
<p>[31:25] One lesson for startups: segmenting your customers</p>
<p>[34:48] Knowing more about Michael’s book<br />
 <br />
Many thanks to our host Ryan Shuken and Oscar Ramos, guest Michael Lai, editor David and Geep, producer Eva Shi, organizer Chinaccelerator and sponsor People Squared. Be sure to check out our website https://chinaccelerator.com/china-startup-pulse-podcast/</p>
<p>If you like us, please give us a 5-star review and share the favorite moment with your friends!</p>
<p>Check more exciting episodes on Linkedin: www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/</p>
<p>Email us: team@chinastartuppulse.com</p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Fri, 10 May 2019 03:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Chinaccelerator)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>More thoughts are required when cultivating the relationship between the brands and users, from a level of “friendship” to being part of a one big “family”. As such, how can businesses deliver better experiences in this environment? Our guest Michael Lai has a diverse background with over 10 years of consulting experience in the areas of branding, interaction design, service design, and experience design. We will learn more from this interview in terms of how he understands the importance of segmenting your customers, maintaining your perspective and moving at the right speed in today’s society.</p>
<p>TANG is an experience strategy and design consultancy focusing on helping clients build a holistic ideal experience for their customers, whose clients have included Fortune 500 companies, startups, nonprofit organizations from financial, consumer electronics, automotive, and education industries.</p>
<p>Show notes:</p>
<p>[03:38] Introduction of TANG</p>
<p>[08:36] Desire for “consumption upgrade”</p>
<p>[11:35] Maintaining your perspective in a fast-paced society</p>
<p>[15:25] Most interesting learning from Michael’s book: “The relationship model”</p>
<p>[18:16] Human resources vs technology component in China</p>
<p>[21:03] Innovate in China, implement it elsewhere out of China</p>
<p>[23:50] Types of companies that are working with TANG</p>
<p>[28:04] Moving at the right speed: speeding up or slowing down  </p>
<p>[31:25] One lesson for startups: segmenting your customers</p>
<p>[34:48] Knowing more about Michael’s book<br />
 <br />
Many thanks to our host Ryan Shuken and Oscar Ramos, guest Michael Lai, editor David and Geep, producer Eva Shi, organizer Chinaccelerator and sponsor People Squared. Be sure to check out our website https://chinaccelerator.com/china-startup-pulse-podcast/</p>
<p>If you like us, please give us a 5-star review and share the favorite moment with your friends!</p>
<p>Check more exciting episodes on Linkedin: www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/</p>
<p>Email us: team@chinastartuppulse.com</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>Building a Holistic Ideal Experience for Your Customers with Michael Lai, PhD, Dean of X Academy &amp; Partner at TANG</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Chinaccelerator</itunes:author>
      <itunes:image href="https://image.simplecastcdn.com/images/a0e035/a0e0352f-fcbe-4ea1-813c-f1a09496ed52/0b354798-1b05-4ddd-bb40-2a9da3c303b4/3000x3000/1557453949artwork.jpg?aid=rss_feed"/>
      <itunes:duration>00:37:53</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>More thoughts are required when cultivating the relationship between the brands and users, from a level of “friendship” to being part of a one big “family”. As such, how can businesses deliver better experiences in this environment? Our guest Michael Lai has a diverse background with over 10 years of consulting experience in the areas of branding, interaction design, service design, and experience design. We will learn more from this interview in terms of how he understands the importance of segmenting your customers, maintaining your perspective and moving at the right speed in today’s society.

TANG is an experience strategy and design consultancy focusing on helping clients build a holistic ideal experience for their customers, whose clients have included Fortune 500 companies, startups, nonprofit organizations from financial, consumer electronics, automotive, and education industries.</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>More thoughts are required when cultivating the relationship between the brands and users, from a level of “friendship” to being part of a one big “family”. As such, how can businesses deliver better experiences in this environment? Our guest Michael Lai has a diverse background with over 10 years of consulting experience in the areas of branding, interaction design, service design, and experience design. We will learn more from this interview in terms of how he understands the importance of segmenting your customers, maintaining your perspective and moving at the right speed in today’s society.

TANG is an experience strategy and design consultancy focusing on helping clients build a holistic ideal experience for their customers, whose clients have included Fortune 500 companies, startups, nonprofit organizations from financial, consumer electronics, automotive, and education industries.</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>accelerator, branding, vc, tang, consulting, chinaccelerator, oscar ramos, users, brands, holistic experience, service design, experience design, innovation, business, customers, interaction design, relationship, startups, consumption upgrade, michael lai</itunes:keywords>
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      <title>Burning Your Money; Pitching to the Media; Art of X-thinking Design; 8X8 Speakers Series (4/4) with Maggie Tan, Russell Flannery and Michael Lai</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>Welcome back to the FINAL episode of Chinaccelerator 8X8 Speakers Series 2019 Spring with Maggie Tan, Former Co-head of Strategy &amp; Planning, Uber China, Russell Flannery, Chief Editor of Forbes China, and Michael Lai, Partner &amp; Dean of X Academy TANG.</p>
<p>Now, stop for a second. Hold your breath and imagine yourself burning 20 million RMB per hour. Unbelievable? That’s what Uber and Didi actually did. Ultimately, burning money is a choice and Maggie advised that one should do the math before venturing into it. How do you actually pitch your company to the media in an impactful manner? For this, Russell provided us with some sage advice on how to stay ahead of the pack and carve your existence successfully. Lastly, the final chapter of this speaker series ends with a book. Michael revealed the essence of x-thinking, and how lessons learned from writing a book could also be applied to the domain of entrepreneurship.</p>
<p>Don’t miss out the amazing insights they shared in this episode!</p>
<p>Show Notes:</p>
<p>[01:53] Maggie’s talk (Maggie’s presentation slide: https://www.jianguoyun.com/p/DYCH0b4Qrai4BxiTu7cB)</p>
<p>[10:40] Russell’s talk (Russell’s presentation slide: https://www.jianguoyun.com/p/DS21l40Qrai4Bxiku7cB)</p>
<p>[26:40] Michael’s talk (Michael’s presentation slide: https://www.jianguoyun.com/p/DSU0GocQrai4Bxieu7cB)</p>
<p>Many thanks to our speakers Maggie Tan, Russell Flannery, and Michael Lai, editor David and Geep, producer Eva Shi, organizer Chinaccelerator and sponsor People Squared. Be sure to check out our website www.chinaccelerator.com.</p>
<p>If you like us, please give us a 5-star review and share with your friends!</p>
<p>Follow us on Linkedin: www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/</p>
<p>Email us: team@chinastartuppulse.com</p>
<p>https://chinaccelerator.com/chinacceleraor-8x8-speakers-series/</p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Thu, 25 Apr 2019 02:41:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Chinaccelerator)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Welcome back to the FINAL episode of Chinaccelerator 8X8 Speakers Series 2019 Spring with Maggie Tan, Former Co-head of Strategy &amp; Planning, Uber China, Russell Flannery, Chief Editor of Forbes China, and Michael Lai, Partner &amp; Dean of X Academy TANG.</p>
<p>Now, stop for a second. Hold your breath and imagine yourself burning 20 million RMB per hour. Unbelievable? That’s what Uber and Didi actually did. Ultimately, burning money is a choice and Maggie advised that one should do the math before venturing into it. How do you actually pitch your company to the media in an impactful manner? For this, Russell provided us with some sage advice on how to stay ahead of the pack and carve your existence successfully. Lastly, the final chapter of this speaker series ends with a book. Michael revealed the essence of x-thinking, and how lessons learned from writing a book could also be applied to the domain of entrepreneurship.</p>
<p>Don’t miss out the amazing insights they shared in this episode!</p>
<p>Show Notes:</p>
<p>[01:53] Maggie’s talk (Maggie’s presentation slide: https://www.jianguoyun.com/p/DYCH0b4Qrai4BxiTu7cB)</p>
<p>[10:40] Russell’s talk (Russell’s presentation slide: https://www.jianguoyun.com/p/DS21l40Qrai4Bxiku7cB)</p>
<p>[26:40] Michael’s talk (Michael’s presentation slide: https://www.jianguoyun.com/p/DSU0GocQrai4Bxieu7cB)</p>
<p>Many thanks to our speakers Maggie Tan, Russell Flannery, and Michael Lai, editor David and Geep, producer Eva Shi, organizer Chinaccelerator and sponsor People Squared. Be sure to check out our website www.chinaccelerator.com.</p>
<p>If you like us, please give us a 5-star review and share with your friends!</p>
<p>Follow us on Linkedin: www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/</p>
<p>Email us: team@chinastartuppulse.com</p>
<p>https://chinaccelerator.com/chinacceleraor-8x8-speakers-series/</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>Burning Your Money; Pitching to the Media; Art of X-thinking Design; 8X8 Speakers Series (4/4) with Maggie Tan, Russell Flannery and Michael Lai</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Chinaccelerator</itunes:author>
      <itunes:image href="https://image.simplecastcdn.com/images/a0e035/a0e0352f-fcbe-4ea1-813c-f1a09496ed52/2553fa07-6eba-49c2-92c0-bc209ea8a788/3000x3000/1556161116artwork.jpg?aid=rss_feed"/>
      <itunes:duration>00:34:45</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>Welcome back to the FINAL episode of Chinaccelerator 8X8 Speakers Series with Maggie Tan, Former Co-head of Strategy &amp; Planning, Uber China, Russell Flannery, Chief Editor of Forbes China, and Michael Lai, Partner &amp; Dean of X Academy TANG.

Now, stop for a second. Hold your breath and imagine yourself burning 20 million RMB per hour. Unbelievable? That’s what Uber and Didi actually did. Ultimately, burning money is a choice and Maggie advised that one should do the math before venturing into it. How do you actually pitch your company to the media in an impactful manner? For this, Russell provided us with some sage advice on how to stay ahead of the pack and carve your existence successfully. Lastly, the final chapter of this speaker series ends with a book. Michael revealed the essence of x-thinking, and how lessons learned from writing a book could also be applied to the domain of entrepreneurship.

Don’t miss out the amazing insights they shared in this episode!</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>Welcome back to the FINAL episode of Chinaccelerator 8X8 Speakers Series with Maggie Tan, Former Co-head of Strategy &amp; Planning, Uber China, Russell Flannery, Chief Editor of Forbes China, and Michael Lai, Partner &amp; Dean of X Academy TANG.

Now, stop for a second. Hold your breath and imagine yourself burning 20 million RMB per hour. Unbelievable? That’s what Uber and Didi actually did. Ultimately, burning money is a choice and Maggie advised that one should do the math before venturing into it. How do you actually pitch your company to the media in an impactful manner? For this, Russell provided us with some sage advice on how to stay ahead of the pack and carve your existence successfully. Lastly, the final chapter of this speaker series ends with a book. Michael revealed the essence of x-thinking, and how lessons learned from writing a book could also be applied to the domain of entrepreneurship.

Don’t miss out the amazing insights they shared in this episode!</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>accelerator, maggie tan, sharing economy, media, didi, tang, auto, consulting, chinaccelerator, sosv, product, startup, entrepreneur, podcast, design, x-thinking, forbes, uber, michael lai, russell flannery, car, burn money, ux</itunes:keywords>
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      <itunes:episode>101</itunes:episode>
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      <title>8Ps of Entrepreneurship, Your Customer Experience Sucks and Simple is Good; 8X8 Speakers Series (3/4) with Alvin Graylin, Neil Liang and Lucas Englehardt</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>Welcome back! We are heading to the 3rd episode of Chinaccelerator 8X8 Speakers Series with Alvin Graylin, China President of HTC, Neil Liang, Chief Product Officer &amp; Co-founder of The Carevoice, and Lucas Englehardt, CEO of xixilab.</p>
<p>Price, Product, Place, Promotion. Sounds familiar? Wait till you see how Alvin raised the bar for this business strategy by doubling it to 8Ps. The path of entrepreneurship, in all its variation, still holds some key principles for those who wish to embark on it. “The simpler u made your customer journey, the more likely your customers will actually repeat that journey,” remarked by Neil. In fact, good customer experience can even be regarded as a baseline that either makes or breaks your business. Finally, Lucas believed in the power of focusing on one thing that works. No buzzwords, no fancy terms. We are going to do things one step at a time and examine for ourselves the beauty in simplicity.</p>
<p>Don’t miss out the amazing insights they shared in this episode!</p>
<p>Show Notes:</p>
<p>[01:50] Alvin’s talk (Alvin’s presentation slides: https://www.jianguoyun.com/p/DSzVz24Qrai4Bxii1LQB)</p>
<p>[12:43] Neil’s talk (Neil’s presentation slides: https://www.jianguoyun.com/p/De8gdOAQrai4BxiY1bQB)</p>
<p>[19:19] Lucas’s Talk (Lucas’s presentation slides: https://www.jianguoyun.com/p/DZJhjl4Qrai4BxiT1bQB)</p>
<p>Many thanks to our speakers Alvin Graylin, Neil Liang and Lucas Englehardt, editor David and Geep, producer Eva Shi, organizer Chinaccelerator and sponsor People Squared. Be sure to check out our website www.chinaccelerator.com.</p>
<p>If you like us, please give us a 5-star review and share with your friends!</p>
<p>Follow us on Linkedin: www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/</p>
<p>Email us: team@chinastartuppulse.com</p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Thu, 18 Apr 2019 03:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Chinaccelerator)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Welcome back! We are heading to the 3rd episode of Chinaccelerator 8X8 Speakers Series with Alvin Graylin, China President of HTC, Neil Liang, Chief Product Officer &amp; Co-founder of The Carevoice, and Lucas Englehardt, CEO of xixilab.</p>
<p>Price, Product, Place, Promotion. Sounds familiar? Wait till you see how Alvin raised the bar for this business strategy by doubling it to 8Ps. The path of entrepreneurship, in all its variation, still holds some key principles for those who wish to embark on it. “The simpler u made your customer journey, the more likely your customers will actually repeat that journey,” remarked by Neil. In fact, good customer experience can even be regarded as a baseline that either makes or breaks your business. Finally, Lucas believed in the power of focusing on one thing that works. No buzzwords, no fancy terms. We are going to do things one step at a time and examine for ourselves the beauty in simplicity.</p>
<p>Don’t miss out the amazing insights they shared in this episode!</p>
<p>Show Notes:</p>
<p>[01:50] Alvin’s talk (Alvin’s presentation slides: https://www.jianguoyun.com/p/DSzVz24Qrai4Bxii1LQB)</p>
<p>[12:43] Neil’s talk (Neil’s presentation slides: https://www.jianguoyun.com/p/De8gdOAQrai4BxiY1bQB)</p>
<p>[19:19] Lucas’s Talk (Lucas’s presentation slides: https://www.jianguoyun.com/p/DZJhjl4Qrai4BxiT1bQB)</p>
<p>Many thanks to our speakers Alvin Graylin, Neil Liang and Lucas Englehardt, editor David and Geep, producer Eva Shi, organizer Chinaccelerator and sponsor People Squared. Be sure to check out our website www.chinaccelerator.com.</p>
<p>If you like us, please give us a 5-star review and share with your friends!</p>
<p>Follow us on Linkedin: www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/</p>
<p>Email us: team@chinastartuppulse.com</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>8Ps of Entrepreneurship, Your Customer Experience Sucks and Simple is Good; 8X8 Speakers Series (3/4) with Alvin Graylin, Neil Liang and Lucas Englehardt</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Chinaccelerator</itunes:author>
      <itunes:image href="https://image.simplecastcdn.com/images/a0e035/a0e0352f-fcbe-4ea1-813c-f1a09496ed52/e185347b-c603-4c7b-bcfd-228f40baff17/3000x3000/1555555531artwork.jpg?aid=rss_feed"/>
      <itunes:duration>00:26:02</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>Welcome back! We are heading to the 3rd episode of Chinaccelerator 8X8 Speakers Series with Alvin Graylin, China President of HTC, Neil Liang, Chief Product Officer &amp; Co-founder of The Carevoice, and Lucas Englehardt, CEO of xixilab.

Price, Product, Place, Promotion. Sounds familiar? Wait till you see how Alvin raised the bar for this business strategy by doubling it to 8Ps. The path of entrepreneurship, in all its variation, still holds some key principles for those who wish to embark on it. “The simpler u made your customer journey, the more likely your customers will actually repeat that journey,” remarked by Neil. In fact, good customer experience can even be regarded as a baseline that either makes or breaks your business. Finally, Lucas believed in the power of focusing on one thing that works. No buzzwords, no fancy terms. We are going to do things one step at a time and examine for ourselves the beauty in simplicity.

Don’t miss out the amazing insights they shared in this episode!</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>Welcome back! We are heading to the 3rd episode of Chinaccelerator 8X8 Speakers Series with Alvin Graylin, China President of HTC, Neil Liang, Chief Product Officer &amp; Co-founder of The Carevoice, and Lucas Englehardt, CEO of xixilab.

Price, Product, Place, Promotion. Sounds familiar? Wait till you see how Alvin raised the bar for this business strategy by doubling it to 8Ps. The path of entrepreneurship, in all its variation, still holds some key principles for those who wish to embark on it. “The simpler u made your customer journey, the more likely your customers will actually repeat that journey,” remarked by Neil. In fact, good customer experience can even be regarded as a baseline that either makes or breaks your business. Finally, Lucas believed in the power of focusing on one thing that works. No buzzwords, no fancy terms. We are going to do things one step at a time and examine for ourselves the beauty in simplicity.

Don’t miss out the amazing insights they shared in this episode!</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>accelerator, vc, the carevoice, china, alvin graylin, healthcare, lucas englehardt, chinaccelerator, 8x8, product, venture capital, entrepreneur, startups, htc, mouth care, customer journey, simple, tech, customer experience, vr, simplicity, xixilab</itunes:keywords>
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      <title>Braving the Winter, Conquering the Fear, Managing the Reality; 8X8 Speakers Series (2/4) with Lu Guo, Jane Lin-Baden and Yintao Feng</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>This week, we shall continue with the second part of Chinaccelerator 8X8 Speakers Series with Lu Guo, Founder and CEO, USHOPAL, Jane Lin-Baden, Managing Partner of APAC, Publicis Group and Yintao Feng, Founder of MIXPACE.</p>
<p>What does it take to be a capable CEO? Lu recalled how she had to raise a few hundred million RMB within a period of 12 months during her coldest winter. Despite all those setbacks, she managed to get the results done and keep the company afloat. Fear of pressure, fear of being unnoticed and fear of falling. Aside from the fear, Jane also revealed to us the secret of flying high above the crowd and bringing out the best quality of yourself even when no one is watching at all. Yintao walked us through the time when he experienced a culture shock after returning back to China. Sharing his transition from corporate to startup, we can get to learn how he adapted to this new environment and what were his techniques in managing and working with people.</p>
<p>Show Notes:</p>
<p>[01:50] Lu Guo’s talk (No slides)</p>
<p>[10:01] Jane Lin-Baden’s talk (Jane’s presentation slide: https://www.jianguoyun.com/p/DdBZIIsQrai4Bxigr7EB)</p>
<p>[19:22] Yintao Feng’s Talk (Yintao’s presentation slide: https://www.jianguoyun.com/p/DdTJ8uEQrai4Bxikr7EB)</p>
<p>Many thanks to our speakers Lu Guo, Jane Lin-Baden and Yintao Feng, editor David and Geep, producer Eva Shi, organizer Chinaccelerator and sponsor People Squared. Be sure to check out our website www.chinaccelerator.com.</p>
<p>If you like us, please give us a 5-star review and share with your friends!</p>
<p>Follow us on Linkedin: www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/</p>
<p>Email us: team@chinastartuppulse.com</p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Thu, 11 Apr 2019 03:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Chinaccelerator)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>This week, we shall continue with the second part of Chinaccelerator 8X8 Speakers Series with Lu Guo, Founder and CEO, USHOPAL, Jane Lin-Baden, Managing Partner of APAC, Publicis Group and Yintao Feng, Founder of MIXPACE.</p>
<p>What does it take to be a capable CEO? Lu recalled how she had to raise a few hundred million RMB within a period of 12 months during her coldest winter. Despite all those setbacks, she managed to get the results done and keep the company afloat. Fear of pressure, fear of being unnoticed and fear of falling. Aside from the fear, Jane also revealed to us the secret of flying high above the crowd and bringing out the best quality of yourself even when no one is watching at all. Yintao walked us through the time when he experienced a culture shock after returning back to China. Sharing his transition from corporate to startup, we can get to learn how he adapted to this new environment and what were his techniques in managing and working with people.</p>
<p>Show Notes:</p>
<p>[01:50] Lu Guo’s talk (No slides)</p>
<p>[10:01] Jane Lin-Baden’s talk (Jane’s presentation slide: https://www.jianguoyun.com/p/DdBZIIsQrai4Bxigr7EB)</p>
<p>[19:22] Yintao Feng’s Talk (Yintao’s presentation slide: https://www.jianguoyun.com/p/DdTJ8uEQrai4Bxikr7EB)</p>
<p>Many thanks to our speakers Lu Guo, Jane Lin-Baden and Yintao Feng, editor David and Geep, producer Eva Shi, organizer Chinaccelerator and sponsor People Squared. Be sure to check out our website www.chinaccelerator.com.</p>
<p>If you like us, please give us a 5-star review and share with your friends!</p>
<p>Follow us on Linkedin: www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/</p>
<p>Email us: team@chinastartuppulse.com</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>Braving the Winter, Conquering the Fear, Managing the Reality; 8X8 Speakers Series (2/4) with Lu Guo, Jane Lin-Baden and Yintao Feng</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Chinaccelerator</itunes:author>
      <itunes:image href="https://image.simplecastcdn.com/images/a0e035/a0e0352f-fcbe-4ea1-813c-f1a09496ed52/d0aeb19e-c394-4020-9315-67ab748910ce/3000x3000/1554945240artwork.jpg?aid=rss_feed"/>
      <itunes:duration>00:28:00</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>This week, we shall continue with the second part of Chinaccelerator 8X8 Speakers Series with Lu Guo, Founder and CEO, USHOPAL, Jane Lin-Baden, Managing Partner of APAC, Publicis Group and Yintao Feng, Founder of MIXPACE.

What does it take to be a capable CEO? Lu recalled how she had to raise a few hundred million RMB within a period of 12 months during her coldest winter. Despite all those setbacks, she managed to get the results done and keep the company afloat. Fear of pressure, fear of being unnoticed and fear of falling. Aside from the fear, Jane also revealed to us the secret of flying high above the crowd and bringing out the best quality of yourself even when no one is watching at all. Yintao walked us through the time when he experienced a culture shock after returning back to China. Sharing his transition from corporate to startup, we can get to learn how he adapted to this new environment and what were his techniques in managing and working with people.</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>This week, we shall continue with the second part of Chinaccelerator 8X8 Speakers Series with Lu Guo, Founder and CEO, USHOPAL, Jane Lin-Baden, Managing Partner of APAC, Publicis Group and Yintao Feng, Founder of MIXPACE.

What does it take to be a capable CEO? Lu recalled how she had to raise a few hundred million RMB within a period of 12 months during her coldest winter. Despite all those setbacks, she managed to get the results done and keep the company afloat. Fear of pressure, fear of being unnoticed and fear of falling. Aside from the fear, Jane also revealed to us the secret of flying high above the crowd and bringing out the best quality of yourself even when no one is watching at all. Yintao walked us through the time when he experienced a culture shock after returning back to China. Sharing his transition from corporate to startup, we can get to learn how he adapted to this new environment and what were his techniques in managing and working with people.</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>accelerator, yintao feng, investor, lu guo, media, vc, jane lin-bade, founder, e-commerce, chinaccelerator, sosv, startup, venture capital, entrepreneur, co-working, mentor, shopal. mixpace, publicis, ushopal</itunes:keywords>
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      <title>Know Your Customers, Be Your Own Salesperson, Follow Your Passion; 2019 Spring 8x8 Speaker Series (1/4) with Dirk Eschenbacher, Rhea See and Jaeson Ma</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>Last month, we just hosted Chinaccelerator 8X8 Speakers Series where we invited 8 of our mentors - serial entrepreneurs, industry experts, and investors - to share their personal stories about entrepreneurship in Beijing and Shanghai, from where we selected several talks for our podcast listeners who couldn’t join us in person. Today we would like to present the first 3 talks delivered by Dirk Eschenbacher, Co-founder of Zanadu Travel &amp; Media, Rhea See,  Co-founder &amp; COO of She Loves Tech and Jaeson Ma, Co-founder of 88rising.</p>
<p>What comes first into Dirk’s mind when he looked back on his startup journey is an important lesson he learned - knowing your customers and focusing on the problem, not the solution. As a female entrepreneur, Rhea zeroed in on the female community and suggested entrepreneurs not to accept the conventional image and sell themselves short. Jaeson Ma brought the house down with his passion and vision to represent Asia media in mainstream culture the right way.</p>
<p>Check out more suggestions they shared in the episode.</p>
<p>Show Notes:</p>
<p>[02:01] Dirk Eschenbacher’s Talk</p>
<p>[09:00] Rhea See’s Talk<br />
(Rhea’s presentation slide: https://www.jianguoyun.com/p/DUf9NkoQrai4BxjqkK4B)</p>
<p>[15:50] Jaeson Ma’s Talk<br />
(Jaeson’s presentation slide: https://www.jianguoyun.com/p/DZ4JsIQQrai4BxjwkK4B)</p>
<p>Many thanks to our speakers Dirk Eschenbacher, Rhea See and Jaeson Ma, editor David and Geep, producer Eva Shi, organizer Chinaccelerator and sponsor People Squared. Be sure to check out our website www.chinaccelerator.com.</p>
<p>If you like us, please give us a 5-star review and share with your friends!</p>
<p>Follow us on Linkedin: www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/</p>
<p>Email us: team@chinastartuppulse.com</p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Thu, 4 Apr 2019 02:55:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Chinaccelerator)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Last month, we just hosted Chinaccelerator 8X8 Speakers Series where we invited 8 of our mentors - serial entrepreneurs, industry experts, and investors - to share their personal stories about entrepreneurship in Beijing and Shanghai, from where we selected several talks for our podcast listeners who couldn’t join us in person. Today we would like to present the first 3 talks delivered by Dirk Eschenbacher, Co-founder of Zanadu Travel &amp; Media, Rhea See,  Co-founder &amp; COO of She Loves Tech and Jaeson Ma, Co-founder of 88rising.</p>
<p>What comes first into Dirk’s mind when he looked back on his startup journey is an important lesson he learned - knowing your customers and focusing on the problem, not the solution. As a female entrepreneur, Rhea zeroed in on the female community and suggested entrepreneurs not to accept the conventional image and sell themselves short. Jaeson Ma brought the house down with his passion and vision to represent Asia media in mainstream culture the right way.</p>
<p>Check out more suggestions they shared in the episode.</p>
<p>Show Notes:</p>
<p>[02:01] Dirk Eschenbacher’s Talk</p>
<p>[09:00] Rhea See’s Talk<br />
(Rhea’s presentation slide: https://www.jianguoyun.com/p/DUf9NkoQrai4BxjqkK4B)</p>
<p>[15:50] Jaeson Ma’s Talk<br />
(Jaeson’s presentation slide: https://www.jianguoyun.com/p/DZ4JsIQQrai4BxjwkK4B)</p>
<p>Many thanks to our speakers Dirk Eschenbacher, Rhea See and Jaeson Ma, editor David and Geep, producer Eva Shi, organizer Chinaccelerator and sponsor People Squared. Be sure to check out our website www.chinaccelerator.com.</p>
<p>If you like us, please give us a 5-star review and share with your friends!</p>
<p>Follow us on Linkedin: www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/</p>
<p>Email us: team@chinastartuppulse.com</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>Know Your Customers, Be Your Own Salesperson, Follow Your Passion; 2019 Spring 8x8 Speaker Series (1/4) with Dirk Eschenbacher, Rhea See and Jaeson Ma</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Chinaccelerator</itunes:author>
      <itunes:image href="https://image.simplecastcdn.com/images/a0e035/a0e0352f-fcbe-4ea1-813c-f1a09496ed52/42a63314-1c98-441e-81af-d7804894e679/3000x3000/1554347746artwork.jpg?aid=rss_feed"/>
      <itunes:duration>00:31:57</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>Last month, we just hosted Chinaccelerator 8X8 Speakers Series where we invited 8 of our mentors - serial entrepreneurs, industry experts and investors - to share their personal stories about entrepreneurship in Beijing and Shanghai, from where we selected several talks for our podcast listeners who couldn’t join us in person. Today we would like to present the first 3 talks delivered by Dirk Eschenbacher, Co-founder of Zanadu Travel &amp; Media, Rhea See,  Co-founder &amp; COO of She Loves Tech and Jaeson Ma, Co-founder of 88rising.

What comes first into Dirk’s mind when he looked back on his startup journey is an important lesson he learned - knowing your customers and focusing on the problem, not the solution. As a female entrepreneur, Rhea zeroed in on the female community and suggested entrepreneurs not to accept the conventional image and sell themselves short. Jaeson Ma brought the house down with his passion and vision to represent Asia media in mainstream culture the right way. 

Check out more suggestions they shared in the episode.</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>Last month, we just hosted Chinaccelerator 8X8 Speakers Series where we invited 8 of our mentors - serial entrepreneurs, industry experts and investors - to share their personal stories about entrepreneurship in Beijing and Shanghai, from where we selected several talks for our podcast listeners who couldn’t join us in person. Today we would like to present the first 3 talks delivered by Dirk Eschenbacher, Co-founder of Zanadu Travel &amp; Media, Rhea See,  Co-founder &amp; COO of She Loves Tech and Jaeson Ma, Co-founder of 88rising.

What comes first into Dirk’s mind when he looked back on his startup journey is an important lesson he learned - knowing your customers and focusing on the problem, not the solution. As a female entrepreneur, Rhea zeroed in on the female community and suggested entrepreneurs not to accept the conventional image and sell themselves short. Jaeson Ma brought the house down with his passion and vision to represent Asia media in mainstream culture the right way. 

Check out more suggestions they shared in the episode.</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>accelerator, problem, solution, china, digital media, 88rising, startup, female entrepreneurs, entertainment, customers, entrepreneurs, culture, asia, jaeson ma, music, travel</itunes:keywords>
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      <title>Why community matters, even for developers with Ricky Ng-Adam and Frederic Bazin, Co-founders of Coderbunker</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>What is your first impression when you think of a co-working space? Ricky Adam and Frederic Bazin envisioned it to be an open community of developers in a shared physical space focused on creating successful engineering team.</p>
<p>It may sound ironic but the process of building software would necessitate social activities, and this requires a wide range of talented people. Coderbunker is right now having huge momentum and getting other non-developers into this community as well. The question is: could this business model be happening in other industries and become a game changer in the future of work?</p>
<p>Show notes:</p>
<p>[2:48] How does Coderbunker define community?</p>
<p>[4:36] How to maintain a community</p>
<p>[5:50] Recommended traits for those who want to be in it</p>
<p>[8:52] Take care of the people first, followed by the project</p>
<p>[13:04] Portfolio of people in this community</p>
<p>[14:59] Difficulty in finding project owners</p>
<p>[16:19] Getting the talented people onboard</p>
<p>[18:26] Examples of big companies trying out this working style</p>
<p>[20:54] Is this the future of all work?</p>
<p>[22:47] Working onsite vs working remotely</p>
<p>[26:30] Will this happen in other industries too?</p>
<p>[27:47] Spreading of this model to other areas of a company</p>
<p>[29:11] Growing a worldwide network</p>
<p>[30:57] What about the issue of copycats?</p>
<p>Many thanks to our host Ryan Shuken and Oscar Ramos, guest Ricky Adam and Frederic Bazin, editor David and Geep, producer Eva Shi, organizer Chinaccelerator and sponsor People Squared. Be sure to check out our website www.chinaccelerator.com</p>
<p>If you like us, please give us a 5-star review and share with your friends!</p>
<p>Follow us on Linkedin: www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/</p>
<p>Email us: team@chinastartuppulse.com</p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Fri, 22 Mar 2019 02:44:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Chinaccelerator)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>What is your first impression when you think of a co-working space? Ricky Adam and Frederic Bazin envisioned it to be an open community of developers in a shared physical space focused on creating successful engineering team.</p>
<p>It may sound ironic but the process of building software would necessitate social activities, and this requires a wide range of talented people. Coderbunker is right now having huge momentum and getting other non-developers into this community as well. The question is: could this business model be happening in other industries and become a game changer in the future of work?</p>
<p>Show notes:</p>
<p>[2:48] How does Coderbunker define community?</p>
<p>[4:36] How to maintain a community</p>
<p>[5:50] Recommended traits for those who want to be in it</p>
<p>[8:52] Take care of the people first, followed by the project</p>
<p>[13:04] Portfolio of people in this community</p>
<p>[14:59] Difficulty in finding project owners</p>
<p>[16:19] Getting the talented people onboard</p>
<p>[18:26] Examples of big companies trying out this working style</p>
<p>[20:54] Is this the future of all work?</p>
<p>[22:47] Working onsite vs working remotely</p>
<p>[26:30] Will this happen in other industries too?</p>
<p>[27:47] Spreading of this model to other areas of a company</p>
<p>[29:11] Growing a worldwide network</p>
<p>[30:57] What about the issue of copycats?</p>
<p>Many thanks to our host Ryan Shuken and Oscar Ramos, guest Ricky Adam and Frederic Bazin, editor David and Geep, producer Eva Shi, organizer Chinaccelerator and sponsor People Squared. Be sure to check out our website www.chinaccelerator.com</p>
<p>If you like us, please give us a 5-star review and share with your friends!</p>
<p>Follow us on Linkedin: www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/</p>
<p>Email us: team@chinastartuppulse.com</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>Why community matters, even for developers with Ricky Ng-Adam and Frederic Bazin, Co-founders of Coderbunker</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Chinaccelerator</itunes:author>
      <itunes:image href="https://image.simplecastcdn.com/images/a0e035/a0e0352f-fcbe-4ea1-813c-f1a09496ed52/945622ef-7d2c-49dd-a728-8b630c08d5cc/3000x3000/1553224530artwork.jpg?aid=rss_feed"/>
      <itunes:duration>00:38:14</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>What is your first impression when you think of a co-working space? Ricky Adam and Frederic Bazin envisioned it to be an open community of developers in a shared physical space focused on creating successful engineering team.

It may sound ironic but the process of building software would necessitate social activities, and this requires a wide range of talented people. Coderbunker is right now having huge momentum and getting other non-developers into this community as well. The question is: could this business model be happening in other industries and become a game changer in the future of work?</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>What is your first impression when you think of a co-working space? Ricky Adam and Frederic Bazin envisioned it to be an open community of developers in a shared physical space focused on creating successful engineering team.

It may sound ironic but the process of building software would necessitate social activities, and this requires a wide range of talented people. Coderbunker is right now having huge momentum and getting other non-developers into this community as well. The question is: could this business model be happening in other industries and become a game changer in the future of work?</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>accelerator, developer, coderbunker, chinaccelerator, community, sosv, startup, venture capital, engineer, entrepreneurs, work, people</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
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    <item>
      <guid isPermaLink="false">bcac3ff0-317b-4e55-8364-e421a40903da</guid>
      <title>Behind the Scenes of China Music Industry with Kenny Bloom, 40-year Music Guru and “Zero-man” for Warner in China</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>Tencent Music, China’s answer to Spotify, filed for U.S. IPO with its soaring valuation at approximately $20 billion in 2018. What is happening in China music and entertainment industry?</p>
<p>Today we have Kenny Bloom who has 40 years experience in the global entertainment media space as the “Zero-man” for Warner in China to walk us through the history of China music industry from the 1980s until now and share his observations from every angle of the market. Once controlling 85% of the international music market in China and producing the #1 Chinese rock star Cuijian, Kenny is telling us the next big opportunities to succeed in this competitive market.</p>
<p>“If you think you can come to China and become a concert promoter, don’t come; if you want to start a record label, don’t come; but if you get innovative technology, this is a really great place to use as a launchpad to test.”</p>
<p>Show notes:</p>
<p>[2:53] Introduction of Kenny Bloom</p>
<p>[4:42] Reception and Censorship</p>
<p>[7:12] What were the Unique Opportunities that Kenny Saw?</p>
<p>[11:22] Having a Simple Business Model that Actually Works</p>
<p>[15:25] Evolution and Valuation of Baidu and other Big Boys</p>
<p>[21:05] Is there Room for Creativity and Ideas in Today's Music Market?</p>
<p>[24:08] You Just Don't Make Money off the Content</p>
<p>[28:06] Getting Visibility in a Massive Chinese Market</p>
<p>[29:14] Consumer is the Biggest Winner</p>
<p>[31:40] What are the Opportunities in this Industry Now?</p>
<p>[34:07] Chinese Bands and Music Outside of China</p>
<p>Many thanks to our host Ryan Shuken and Oscar Ramos, guest Kenny Bloom, editor David and Geep, producer Eva Shi, organizer Chinaccelerator and sponsor People Squared. Be sure to check out our website www.chinaccelerator.com</p>
<p>If you like us, please give us a 5-star review and share with your friends!</p>
<p>Follow us on Linkedin: www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/</p>
<p>Email us: team@chinastartuppulse.com</p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Fri, 15 Mar 2019 05:40:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Chinaccelerator)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Tencent Music, China’s answer to Spotify, filed for U.S. IPO with its soaring valuation at approximately $20 billion in 2018. What is happening in China music and entertainment industry?</p>
<p>Today we have Kenny Bloom who has 40 years experience in the global entertainment media space as the “Zero-man” for Warner in China to walk us through the history of China music industry from the 1980s until now and share his observations from every angle of the market. Once controlling 85% of the international music market in China and producing the #1 Chinese rock star Cuijian, Kenny is telling us the next big opportunities to succeed in this competitive market.</p>
<p>“If you think you can come to China and become a concert promoter, don’t come; if you want to start a record label, don’t come; but if you get innovative technology, this is a really great place to use as a launchpad to test.”</p>
<p>Show notes:</p>
<p>[2:53] Introduction of Kenny Bloom</p>
<p>[4:42] Reception and Censorship</p>
<p>[7:12] What were the Unique Opportunities that Kenny Saw?</p>
<p>[11:22] Having a Simple Business Model that Actually Works</p>
<p>[15:25] Evolution and Valuation of Baidu and other Big Boys</p>
<p>[21:05] Is there Room for Creativity and Ideas in Today's Music Market?</p>
<p>[24:08] You Just Don't Make Money off the Content</p>
<p>[28:06] Getting Visibility in a Massive Chinese Market</p>
<p>[29:14] Consumer is the Biggest Winner</p>
<p>[31:40] What are the Opportunities in this Industry Now?</p>
<p>[34:07] Chinese Bands and Music Outside of China</p>
<p>Many thanks to our host Ryan Shuken and Oscar Ramos, guest Kenny Bloom, editor David and Geep, producer Eva Shi, organizer Chinaccelerator and sponsor People Squared. Be sure to check out our website www.chinaccelerator.com</p>
<p>If you like us, please give us a 5-star review and share with your friends!</p>
<p>Follow us on Linkedin: www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/</p>
<p>Email us: team@chinastartuppulse.com</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>Behind the Scenes of China Music Industry with Kenny Bloom, 40-year Music Guru and “Zero-man” for Warner in China</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Chinaccelerator</itunes:author>
      <itunes:image href="https://image.simplecastcdn.com/images/a0e035/a0e0352f-fcbe-4ea1-813c-f1a09496ed52/c272adea-dbc4-450d-a17f-56ef7f6493e9/3000x3000/1552628966artwork.jpg?aid=rss_feed"/>
      <itunes:duration>00:39:17</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>Tencent Music, China’s answer to Spotify, filed for U.S. IPO with its soaring valuation at approximately $20 billion in 2018. What is happening in China music and entertainment industry? 

Today we have Kenny Bloom who has 40 years experience in the global entertainment media space as the “Zero-man” for Warner in China to walk us through the history of China music industry from the 1980s until now and share his observations from every angle of the market. Once controlling 85% of the international music market in China and producing the #1 Chinese rock star Cuijian, Kenny is telling us the next big opportunities to succeed in this competitive market.

“If you think you can come to China and become a concert promoter, don’t come; if you want to start a record label, don’t come; but if you get innovative technology, this is a really great place to use as a launchpad to test.”</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>Tencent Music, China’s answer to Spotify, filed for U.S. IPO with its soaring valuation at approximately $20 billion in 2018. What is happening in China music and entertainment industry? 

Today we have Kenny Bloom who has 40 years experience in the global entertainment media space as the “Zero-man” for Warner in China to walk us through the history of China music industry from the 1980s until now and share his observations from every angle of the market. Once controlling 85% of the international music market in China and producing the #1 Chinese rock star Cuijian, Kenny is telling us the next big opportunities to succeed in this competitive market.

“If you think you can come to China and become a concert promoter, don’t come; if you want to start a record label, don’t come; but if you get innovative technology, this is a really great place to use as a launchpad to test.”</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>warner, kenny bloom, bands, pop, cuijian, media, vc, china, chinaccelerator, oscar ramos, spotify, sosv, entertainment, hip-pop, concert, creativity, tencent music, festival, music</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
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      <title>Live recorded from MWC 2019: China, Copycat, Creator with Yossi Vardi, Israel’s Hi-tech Godfather and Chairman of 4YFN</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>With his five-decade experience co-founding and investing in over 90 IT companies, Yossi is unofficially titled with “Israeli hi-tech godfather” and twice received the Prime Minister Award for life achievements in the high tech area. He is also the creator of ICQ, the world’s first instant messaging company, which inspired many messaging products including QQ in China.</p>
<p>We are honored to have Yossi to be on China Startup Pulse Podcast today where he shared his thoughts about the copycat, innovation, IP protection, Israeli tech ecosystem, and Chinese startups. As he mentioned, “We have to evaluate the whole picture...not just good or bad to be a copycat&quot;.</p>
<p>MWC Shanghai 2019 4YFN Startup Event now is opening 1000 free tickets to Chinaccelerator and China Startup Pulse fans! Fill in this form to reserve your seats in advance: www.wjx.top/jq/35116917.aspx</p>
<p>Show Notes:</p>
<p>[01:45] Introduction of Yossi Vardi, Founder of ICQ</p>
<p>[02:26] Transition from a Geek to an Investor</p>
<p>[05:02] What is ICQ?</p>
<p>[07:40] Why is ICQ so Special?</p>
<p>[10:15] Is Copycat a Cause of Concern for Ecosystem in China?</p>
<p>[13:00] How much can We Protect Companies that are Trying to Create New Things?</p>
<p>[15:11] Make in China, Clone for Others?</p>
<p>[17:51] Israel &amp; its &quot;Deep Complicated Technologies&quot;</p>
<p>[20:54] Barriers for Startups Entering China &amp; How to Overcome Them</p>
<p>[25:11] Further Expansion of Chinese Startups Across the Globe</p>
<p>[27:51] The Impressive Chinese Phenomenon</p>
<p>[28:30] Essential Fundamentals of an Economy in the Long Run</p>
<p>[29:44] Future Plans by Yossi Vardi</p>
<p>Many thanks to our host Oscar Ramos, guest Yossi Vardi, editor David and Geep, producer Eva Shi, organizer Chinaccelerator and sponsor People Squared. Be sure to check out our website www.chinaccelerator.com</p>
<p>If you like us, please give us a 5-star review and share with your friends!</p>
<p>Follow us on Linkedin: www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/</p>
<p>Email us: team@chinastartuppulse.com</p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Fri, 1 Mar 2019 03:05:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Chinaccelerator)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>With his five-decade experience co-founding and investing in over 90 IT companies, Yossi is unofficially titled with “Israeli hi-tech godfather” and twice received the Prime Minister Award for life achievements in the high tech area. He is also the creator of ICQ, the world’s first instant messaging company, which inspired many messaging products including QQ in China.</p>
<p>We are honored to have Yossi to be on China Startup Pulse Podcast today where he shared his thoughts about the copycat, innovation, IP protection, Israeli tech ecosystem, and Chinese startups. As he mentioned, “We have to evaluate the whole picture...not just good or bad to be a copycat&quot;.</p>
<p>MWC Shanghai 2019 4YFN Startup Event now is opening 1000 free tickets to Chinaccelerator and China Startup Pulse fans! Fill in this form to reserve your seats in advance: www.wjx.top/jq/35116917.aspx</p>
<p>Show Notes:</p>
<p>[01:45] Introduction of Yossi Vardi, Founder of ICQ</p>
<p>[02:26] Transition from a Geek to an Investor</p>
<p>[05:02] What is ICQ?</p>
<p>[07:40] Why is ICQ so Special?</p>
<p>[10:15] Is Copycat a Cause of Concern for Ecosystem in China?</p>
<p>[13:00] How much can We Protect Companies that are Trying to Create New Things?</p>
<p>[15:11] Make in China, Clone for Others?</p>
<p>[17:51] Israel &amp; its &quot;Deep Complicated Technologies&quot;</p>
<p>[20:54] Barriers for Startups Entering China &amp; How to Overcome Them</p>
<p>[25:11] Further Expansion of Chinese Startups Across the Globe</p>
<p>[27:51] The Impressive Chinese Phenomenon</p>
<p>[28:30] Essential Fundamentals of an Economy in the Long Run</p>
<p>[29:44] Future Plans by Yossi Vardi</p>
<p>Many thanks to our host Oscar Ramos, guest Yossi Vardi, editor David and Geep, producer Eva Shi, organizer Chinaccelerator and sponsor People Squared. Be sure to check out our website www.chinaccelerator.com</p>
<p>If you like us, please give us a 5-star review and share with your friends!</p>
<p>Follow us on Linkedin: www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/</p>
<p>Email us: team@chinastartuppulse.com</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>Live recorded from MWC 2019: China, Copycat, Creator with Yossi Vardi, Israel’s Hi-tech Godfather and Chairman of 4YFN</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Chinaccelerator</itunes:author>
      <itunes:image href="https://image.simplecastcdn.com/images/a0e035/a0e0352f-fcbe-4ea1-813c-f1a09496ed52/a7aa1a3f-9db4-411a-bacb-1cac851e336a/3000x3000/1551410064artwork.jpg?aid=rss_feed"/>
      <itunes:duration>00:32:35</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>With his five-decade experience co-founding and investing in over 90 IT companies, Yossi is unofficially titled with “Israeli hi-tech godfather” and twice received the Prime Minister Award for life achievements in the high tech area. He is also the creator of ICQ, the world’s first instant messaging company, which inspired many messaging products including QQ in China.

We are honored to have Yossi to be on China Startup Pulse Podcast today where he shared his thoughts about the copycat, innovation, IP protection, Israeli tech ecosystem, and Chinese startups. As he mentioned, “We have to evaluate the whole picture...not just good or bad to be a copycat&quot;.

MWC Shanghai 2019 4YFN Startup Event now is opening 1000 free tickets to Chinaccelerator and China Startup Pulse fans! Fill in this form to reserve your seats in advance: www.wjx.top/jq/35116917.aspx</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>With his five-decade experience co-founding and investing in over 90 IT companies, Yossi is unofficially titled with “Israeli hi-tech godfather” and twice received the Prime Minister Award for life achievements in the high tech area. He is also the creator of ICQ, the world’s first instant messaging company, which inspired many messaging products including QQ in China.

We are honored to have Yossi to be on China Startup Pulse Podcast today where he shared his thoughts about the copycat, innovation, IP protection, Israeli tech ecosystem, and Chinese startups. As he mentioned, “We have to evaluate the whole picture...not just good or bad to be a copycat&quot;.

MWC Shanghai 2019 4YFN Startup Event now is opening 1000 free tickets to Chinaccelerator and China Startup Pulse fans! Fill in this form to reserve your seats in advance: www.wjx.top/jq/35116917.aspx</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>israel, economy, creator, wechat, expand overseas, china, instant messaging, it, qq, chinaccelerator, oscar ramos, sosv, cross-border, ip, copycat, innovation, mobile world congress, hi-tech, startups, tech, yossi vardi, 4ync, icq</itunes:keywords>
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      <title>Reinventing entertainment through social commerce with Greig Charlton, CEO at 247tickets</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>247tickets is a leading social commerce platform for entertainment in China, which just secured $2M in Series Pre-A led by Artesian Venture Partners with the participation from SOSV and Haitao Capital, and the company’s annual revenue in 2018 reached $4.9M. Greig Charlton, CEO at 247tickets and alumni of Chinaccelerator, joined us to share 247’s growth story today. After listening to this episode, you will understand how the new idea was born, how to deal with your competitors, the biggest challenge to run a business in China, and also how difficult it is to fundraise in China. In the future, 247tickets plan to utilize AI technology for personalizing the user experience.</p>
<p>Show notes:</p>
<p>[1:15] Introduce Greig and 247</p>
<p>[2:54] How did 247 start in Shanghai</p>
<p>[6:30] Why those existing platforms couldn’t solve the problem</p>
<p>[10:40] Traditional e-commerce VS Social Commerce</p>
<p>[12:50]Why social commerce has been more successful in China</p>
<p>[14:30] The market was too niche?</p>
<p>[17:53] User profile</p>
<p>[20:17] The team behind the product</p>
<p>[21:50] Find the right people to join your team</p>
<p>[24:10] Challenges to run business in China</p>
<p>[29:35] Work with other well-funded competitors</p>
<p>[33:31] Fundraising in China </p>
<p>[38:10] Future for 247</p>
<p>Many thanks to our host Oscar Ramos, guest Greig Charlton, editor David and Geep, producer Eva Shi, organizer Chinaccelerator and sponsor People Squared. Be sure to check out our website www.chinaccelerator.com</p>
<p>If you like us, please give us a 5-star review and share with your friends!</p>
<p>Follow us on Linkedin: www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/</p>
<p>Email us: team@chinastartuppulse.com</p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Thu, 21 Feb 2019 03:02:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Chinaccelerator)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>247tickets is a leading social commerce platform for entertainment in China, which just secured $2M in Series Pre-A led by Artesian Venture Partners with the participation from SOSV and Haitao Capital, and the company’s annual revenue in 2018 reached $4.9M. Greig Charlton, CEO at 247tickets and alumni of Chinaccelerator, joined us to share 247’s growth story today. After listening to this episode, you will understand how the new idea was born, how to deal with your competitors, the biggest challenge to run a business in China, and also how difficult it is to fundraise in China. In the future, 247tickets plan to utilize AI technology for personalizing the user experience.</p>
<p>Show notes:</p>
<p>[1:15] Introduce Greig and 247</p>
<p>[2:54] How did 247 start in Shanghai</p>
<p>[6:30] Why those existing platforms couldn’t solve the problem</p>
<p>[10:40] Traditional e-commerce VS Social Commerce</p>
<p>[12:50]Why social commerce has been more successful in China</p>
<p>[14:30] The market was too niche?</p>
<p>[17:53] User profile</p>
<p>[20:17] The team behind the product</p>
<p>[21:50] Find the right people to join your team</p>
<p>[24:10] Challenges to run business in China</p>
<p>[29:35] Work with other well-funded competitors</p>
<p>[33:31] Fundraising in China </p>
<p>[38:10] Future for 247</p>
<p>Many thanks to our host Oscar Ramos, guest Greig Charlton, editor David and Geep, producer Eva Shi, organizer Chinaccelerator and sponsor People Squared. Be sure to check out our website www.chinaccelerator.com</p>
<p>If you like us, please give us a 5-star review and share with your friends!</p>
<p>Follow us on Linkedin: www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/</p>
<p>Email us: team@chinastartuppulse.com</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>Reinventing entertainment through social commerce with Greig Charlton, CEO at 247tickets</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Chinaccelerator</itunes:author>
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      <itunes:summary>247tickets is a leading social commerce platform for entertainment in China, which just secured $2M in Series Pre-A led by Artesian Venture Partners with the participation from SOSV and Haitao Capital, and the company’s annual revenue in 2018 reached $4.9M. Greig Charlton, CEO at 247tickets and alumni of Chinaccelerator, joined us to share 247’s growth story today. After listening to this episode, you will understand how the new idea was born, how to deal with your competitors, the biggest challenge to run a business in China, and also how difficult it is to fundraise in China. In the future, 247tickets plan to utilize AI technology for personalizing the user experience.</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>247tickets is a leading social commerce platform for entertainment in China, which just secured $2M in Series Pre-A led by Artesian Venture Partners with the participation from SOSV and Haitao Capital, and the company’s annual revenue in 2018 reached $4.9M. Greig Charlton, CEO at 247tickets and alumni of Chinaccelerator, joined us to share 247’s growth story today. After listening to this episode, you will understand how the new idea was born, how to deal with your competitors, the biggest challenge to run a business in China, and also how difficult it is to fundraise in China. In the future, 247tickets plan to utilize AI technology for personalizing the user experience.</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>growth, team, social commerce, concerts, 247, artificial intelligence, customization, 247tickets, fundraising, china, live shows, e-commerce, sosv, ai, musical, entertainment, exhibitions, personalization, artesian venture partner, user profile</itunes:keywords>
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      <title>Make yourself visible for exits with Benjamin Joffe, Partner at HAX</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>95% of exits are acquisitions rather than IPO. Also nearly a half of them are before Series B. In today’s episode, we invited Benjamin Joffe, who is a partner at the leading global hardware accelerator HAX and has made nearly a thousand angel investments, to share his insights about exits. Here you can find out the big differences between exits in China and exits in the rest of the world, how Chinese companies develop the acquisition playbook globally and also for entrepreneurs, how you can plan your exits and the better way to integrate yourself into another corporate body.</p>
<p>Check out Benjamin’s articles about exits: https://techcrunch.com/2018/07/31/what-every-startup-founder-should-know-about-exits/</p>
<p>Show Notes:</p>
<p>[2:02] The reality about exits</p>
<p>[3:00] The big differences between exits in China and exits in the rest of the world</p>
<p>[4:27] Motivations for Chinese companies to start exploring acquisitions</p>
<p>[6:09] Are Chinese companies looking for new things that are not in China</p>
<p>[7:52] Specific phenomenon across Chinese M&amp;A activities</p>
<p>[11:20] Chinese acquisitions in China</p>
<p>[13:09] How founders plan exits</p>
<p>[15:28] How founders should change the strategies based on the feedback</p>
<p>[17:56] The typical exits happen before Series B</p>
<p>[19:19] Sell your company before you close the round or do it right after</p>
<p>[21:30] Competitions and options among corporates</p>
<p>[24:42] Chances of International corporates seeking M&amp;A opportunities in China</p>
<p>[28:27] Founders’ challenges about potentially selling a company to Chinese buyers</p>
<p>[32:03] Founders should be careful about the information disclosure in the due diligence process</p>
<p>[35:19] How founders make themselves visible to potential buyers</p>
<p>Many thanks to our host Oscar Ramos, guest Benjamin Joffe, editor David and Geep, producer Eva Shi, organizer Chinaccelerator and sponsor People Squared. Be sure to check out our website www.chinaccelerator.com</p>
<p>If you like us, please give us a 5-star review and share with your friends!</p>
<p>Follow us on Linkedin: www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/</p>
<p>Email us: team@chinastartuppulse.com</p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Thu, 14 Feb 2019 03:15:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Chinaccelerator)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>95% of exits are acquisitions rather than IPO. Also nearly a half of them are before Series B. In today’s episode, we invited Benjamin Joffe, who is a partner at the leading global hardware accelerator HAX and has made nearly a thousand angel investments, to share his insights about exits. Here you can find out the big differences between exits in China and exits in the rest of the world, how Chinese companies develop the acquisition playbook globally and also for entrepreneurs, how you can plan your exits and the better way to integrate yourself into another corporate body.</p>
<p>Check out Benjamin’s articles about exits: https://techcrunch.com/2018/07/31/what-every-startup-founder-should-know-about-exits/</p>
<p>Show Notes:</p>
<p>[2:02] The reality about exits</p>
<p>[3:00] The big differences between exits in China and exits in the rest of the world</p>
<p>[4:27] Motivations for Chinese companies to start exploring acquisitions</p>
<p>[6:09] Are Chinese companies looking for new things that are not in China</p>
<p>[7:52] Specific phenomenon across Chinese M&amp;A activities</p>
<p>[11:20] Chinese acquisitions in China</p>
<p>[13:09] How founders plan exits</p>
<p>[15:28] How founders should change the strategies based on the feedback</p>
<p>[17:56] The typical exits happen before Series B</p>
<p>[19:19] Sell your company before you close the round or do it right after</p>
<p>[21:30] Competitions and options among corporates</p>
<p>[24:42] Chances of International corporates seeking M&amp;A opportunities in China</p>
<p>[28:27] Founders’ challenges about potentially selling a company to Chinese buyers</p>
<p>[32:03] Founders should be careful about the information disclosure in the due diligence process</p>
<p>[35:19] How founders make themselves visible to potential buyers</p>
<p>Many thanks to our host Oscar Ramos, guest Benjamin Joffe, editor David and Geep, producer Eva Shi, organizer Chinaccelerator and sponsor People Squared. Be sure to check out our website www.chinaccelerator.com</p>
<p>If you like us, please give us a 5-star review and share with your friends!</p>
<p>Follow us on Linkedin: www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/</p>
<p>Email us: team@chinastartuppulse.com</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>Make yourself visible for exits with Benjamin Joffe, Partner at HAX</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Chinaccelerator</itunes:author>
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      <itunes:duration>00:38:16</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>95% of exits are acquisitions rather than IPO. Also nearly a half of them are before Series B. In today’s episode, we invited Benjamin Joffe, who is a partner at the leading global hardware accelerator HAX and has made nearly a thousand angel investments, to share his insights about exits. Here you can find out the big differences between exits in China and exits in the rest of the world, how Chinese companies develop the acquisition playbook globally and also for entrepreneurs, how you can plan your exits and the better way to integrate yourself into another corporate body.</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>95% of exits are acquisitions rather than IPO. Also nearly a half of them are before Series B. In today’s episode, we invited Benjamin Joffe, who is a partner at the leading global hardware accelerator HAX and has made nearly a thousand angel investments, to share his insights about exits. Here you can find out the big differences between exits in China and exits in the rest of the world, how Chinese companies develop the acquisition playbook globally and also for entrepreneurs, how you can plan your exits and the better way to integrate yourself into another corporate body.</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>early stage, accelerator, corporates, investor, exits, vc, international, china, founders, musically, tantan, tiktok, chinaccelerator, sell, sosv, cross-border, due diligence, venture capital, momo, buyers, startups, entrepreneurs, acquisitions, m&amp;a</itunes:keywords>
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      <guid isPermaLink="false">e2e0601a-4439-4cc3-bfc8-323a6575a20d</guid>
      <title>What Corporate VCs Get Wrong About Startups with Andrew Gaule, CEO of Aimava</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>One way for startups to grow or even exit is to work with corporates. Are corporates looking for financial return or strategic values while working with startups? For entrepreneurs, what are the challenges and opportunities to have corporates as their shareholders? How do overseas corporates see the chances in China? In this episode, we invited Andrew Gaule who has almost 20 years experience in Corporate Venture Capital (CVC) to analyze both sides of the table and delivered insights and suggestions for corporates and startups.</p>
<p>Show notes:</p>
<p>[1:10] Introducing Andrew Gaule</p>
<p>[4:57] The land of corporate venture capital (CVC)</p>
<p>[7:50] Challenges to have corporates as shareholders</p>
<p>[11:13] The motivation of CVC - financial return and strategic values</p>
<p>[19:15] How to protect startups’ advantages</p>
<p>[21:50] Things that CVC are doing wrong when approaching startups</p>
<p>[24:10] Corporates to think about China</p>
<p>[28:30] How to leverage the innovation in China for the rest of the world</p>
<p>[32:40] Challenges of CVC in China</p>
<p>[38:08] Concerns for startups to work with Chinese investors</p>
<p>[39:24] The impact of Trade War</p>
<p>Many thanks to our host Oscar Ramos, guest Andrew Gaule, editor David and Geep, producer Eva Shi, organizer Chinaccelerator and sponsor People Squared. Be sure to check out our website www.chinaccelerator.com.</p>
<p>If you like us, please give us a 5-star review on the podcast platforms and share with your friends!</p>
<p>Follow us on Linkedin: www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/</p>
<p>Email us: eva.shi@chinastartuppulse.com</p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Thu, 31 Jan 2019 03:24:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Chinaccelerator)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>One way for startups to grow or even exit is to work with corporates. Are corporates looking for financial return or strategic values while working with startups? For entrepreneurs, what are the challenges and opportunities to have corporates as their shareholders? How do overseas corporates see the chances in China? In this episode, we invited Andrew Gaule who has almost 20 years experience in Corporate Venture Capital (CVC) to analyze both sides of the table and delivered insights and suggestions for corporates and startups.</p>
<p>Show notes:</p>
<p>[1:10] Introducing Andrew Gaule</p>
<p>[4:57] The land of corporate venture capital (CVC)</p>
<p>[7:50] Challenges to have corporates as shareholders</p>
<p>[11:13] The motivation of CVC - financial return and strategic values</p>
<p>[19:15] How to protect startups’ advantages</p>
<p>[21:50] Things that CVC are doing wrong when approaching startups</p>
<p>[24:10] Corporates to think about China</p>
<p>[28:30] How to leverage the innovation in China for the rest of the world</p>
<p>[32:40] Challenges of CVC in China</p>
<p>[38:08] Concerns for startups to work with Chinese investors</p>
<p>[39:24] The impact of Trade War</p>
<p>Many thanks to our host Oscar Ramos, guest Andrew Gaule, editor David and Geep, producer Eva Shi, organizer Chinaccelerator and sponsor People Squared. Be sure to check out our website www.chinaccelerator.com.</p>
<p>If you like us, please give us a 5-star review on the podcast platforms and share with your friends!</p>
<p>Follow us on Linkedin: www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/</p>
<p>Email us: eva.shi@chinastartuppulse.com</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>What Corporate VCs Get Wrong About Startups with Andrew Gaule, CEO of Aimava</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Chinaccelerator</itunes:author>
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      <itunes:duration>00:43:58</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>One way for startups to grow or even exit is to work with corporates. Are corporates looking for financial return or strategic values while working with startups? For entrepreneurs, what are the challenges and opportunities to have corporates as their shareholders? How do overseas corporates see the chances in China? In this episode, we invited Andrew Gaule who has almost 20 years experience in Corporate Venture Capital (CVC) to analyze both sides of the table and delivered insights and suggestions for corporates and startups.</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>One way for startups to grow or even exit is to work with corporates. Are corporates looking for financial return or strategic values while working with startups? For entrepreneurs, what are the challenges and opportunities to have corporates as their shareholders? How do overseas corporates see the chances in China? In this episode, we invited Andrew Gaule who has almost 20 years experience in Corporate Venture Capital (CVC) to analyze both sides of the table and delivered insights and suggestions for corporates and startups.</itunes:subtitle>
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      <title>Tackling the healthcare challenges of the China&apos;s aging society with Mark Spitalnik , CEO of China Senior Care</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>Many people don't believe that the senior care is a big healthcare need in China. Our guest for today, Mark Spitalnik, CEO of China Senior Care, is actually one of the first movers in this area from 2009 to educate the market, bring the international experience to China and also localize the product for the aged in China. As he mentioned, the fact is “Chinese customers don’t know what senior care is” rather than “they don’t want it”.</p>
<p>In addition, he also shared how he started the company, the initial challenge he was facing and also the untouched opportunities to look at in China.</p>
<p>China Senior Care provides senior healthcare services to promote the health, happiness, and independence of residents in China. It offers geriatric care services for the aged. The company was incorporated in 2009 and is based in Hangzhou, China.</p>
<p>Show notes:</p>
<p>[1:30] Introduction and Mark’s experience in China</p>
<p>[4:30] How the single child policy influenced the China society</p>
<p>[5:10] Introduce China Senior Care</p>
<p>[6:18] First challenges Mark had to face while building up China Senior Care</p>
<p>[9:10] How Mark introduced the product to Chinese customers even though people did not believe senior care is a giant healthcare need in China</p>
<p>[12:00] How to educate the market</p>
<p>[15:14] How localized the product is</p>
<p>[16:00] How the dynamic of the team helped with the product and service</p>
<p>[19:10] The biggest needs coming with more Chinese people saving money</p>
<p>[24:00] The opportunities that are untouched in China to look at</p>
<p>[26:20] Contact Information and sign off</p>
<p>Many thanks to our host Ryan Shuken, guest Mark Spitalnik , editor David and Geep, producer Eva Shi, organizer Chinaccelerator and sponsor People Squared. Be sure to check out our website www.chinaccelerator.com.</p>
<p>If you like us, please give us a 5-star review on the podcast platforms and share with your friends!</p>
<p>Follow us on Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/</p>
<p>Email us: eva.shi@chinastartuppulse.com</p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Thu, 24 Jan 2019 03:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Chinaccelerator)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Many people don't believe that the senior care is a big healthcare need in China. Our guest for today, Mark Spitalnik, CEO of China Senior Care, is actually one of the first movers in this area from 2009 to educate the market, bring the international experience to China and also localize the product for the aged in China. As he mentioned, the fact is “Chinese customers don’t know what senior care is” rather than “they don’t want it”.</p>
<p>In addition, he also shared how he started the company, the initial challenge he was facing and also the untouched opportunities to look at in China.</p>
<p>China Senior Care provides senior healthcare services to promote the health, happiness, and independence of residents in China. It offers geriatric care services for the aged. The company was incorporated in 2009 and is based in Hangzhou, China.</p>
<p>Show notes:</p>
<p>[1:30] Introduction and Mark’s experience in China</p>
<p>[4:30] How the single child policy influenced the China society</p>
<p>[5:10] Introduce China Senior Care</p>
<p>[6:18] First challenges Mark had to face while building up China Senior Care</p>
<p>[9:10] How Mark introduced the product to Chinese customers even though people did not believe senior care is a giant healthcare need in China</p>
<p>[12:00] How to educate the market</p>
<p>[15:14] How localized the product is</p>
<p>[16:00] How the dynamic of the team helped with the product and service</p>
<p>[19:10] The biggest needs coming with more Chinese people saving money</p>
<p>[24:00] The opportunities that are untouched in China to look at</p>
<p>[26:20] Contact Information and sign off</p>
<p>Many thanks to our host Ryan Shuken, guest Mark Spitalnik , editor David and Geep, producer Eva Shi, organizer Chinaccelerator and sponsor People Squared. Be sure to check out our website www.chinaccelerator.com.</p>
<p>If you like us, please give us a 5-star review on the podcast platforms and share with your friends!</p>
<p>Follow us on Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/company/the-china-startup-pulse/</p>
<p>Email us: eva.shi@chinastartuppulse.com</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>Tackling the healthcare challenges of the China&apos;s aging society with Mark Spitalnik , CEO of China Senior Care</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Chinaccelerator</itunes:author>
      <itunes:image href="https://image.simplecastcdn.com/images/a0e035/a0e0352f-fcbe-4ea1-813c-f1a09496ed52/01dada52-fc61-4208-b04e-c8866f6214e9/3000x3000/1548256604artwork.jpg?aid=rss_feed"/>
      <itunes:duration>00:28:09</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>Many people don&apos;t believe that the senior care is a big healthcare need in China. Our guest for today, Mark Spitalnik, CEO of China Senior Care, is actually one of the first movers in this area from 2009 to educate the market, bring the international experience to China and also localize the product for the aged in China. As he mentioned, the fact is “Chinese customers don’t know what senior care is” rather than “they don’t want it”.

In addition, he also shared how he started the company, the initial challenge he was facing and also the untouched opportunities to look at in China.

China Senior Care provides senior healthcare services to promote the health, happiness, and independence of residents in China. It offers geriatric care services for the aged. The company was incorporated in 2009 and is based in Hangzhou, China.</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>Many people don&apos;t believe that the senior care is a big healthcare need in China. Our guest for today, Mark Spitalnik, CEO of China Senior Care, is actually one of the first movers in this area from 2009 to educate the market, bring the international experience to China and also localize the product for the aged in China. As he mentioned, the fact is “Chinese customers don’t know what senior care is” rather than “they don’t want it”.

In addition, he also shared how he started the company, the initial challenge he was facing and also the untouched opportunities to look at in China.

China Senior Care provides senior healthcare services to promote the health, happiness, and independence of residents in China. It offers geriatric care services for the aged. The company was incorporated in 2009 and is based in Hangzhou, China.</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>accelerator, senior, old people, vc, international, senior care, china, founders, localization, healthcare, opportunities, venture capital, customers, startups, entrepreneurs, elderly, challenges, market, single child policy</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
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      <title>How Can Failure Make You Strong; 8X8 Speakers Series (2/2) with Sophie Yao, Gen Kanai, and Prakhar Khanduj (PK)</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>The second episode of the 8X8 Speakers Series is about lessons learnt from failures from the perspective of an investor, a successful entrepreneur and a tech expert.</p>
<p>The first talk in this episode is delivered by Sophie Yao, China Regional General Manager of Fenox Venture Capital, who shared 3 most “effective” ways to screw up a startup based on her experience working with startups. Problems include no market needs, wrong timing, management issues and also the way you spent the money, etc.</p>
<p>We also have Gen Kanai who used to grow communities of tens of thousands of Firefox users across Asia, to share the lessons he got from Firefox’s failures. Currently, he works as the Director Of Strategic Partnerships at Animoca Brands.</p>
<p>Prakhar Khandui (PK) is a serial entrepreneur who sold his company Pulse to Tencent-backed Hike Messenger in India. He also delivered 2 mistakes and 3 failures he learnt in this episode, for example, selling the startup too early is not a good choice.</p>
<p>Chinaccelerator’s 8X8 Speakers Series invite 8 of Chinaccelerator mentors - serial entrepreneurs, industry experts and investors - to share their personal stories about entrepreneurship twice a year in Beijing and Shanghai.</p>
<p>Show Notes:<br />
2:05 Sophie Yao’s talk<br />
13:39 Gen Kanai’s talk<br />
23:16 PK’s talk</p>
<p>Many thanks to our speakers Sophie Yao, Gen Kanai, and Prakhar Khanduj (PK), editor David and Geep, producer Eva Shi, organizer Chinaccelerator and sponsor People Squared. Be sure to check out our website www.chinaccelerator.com.</p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Thu, 17 Jan 2019 04:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Chinaccelerator)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The second episode of the 8X8 Speakers Series is about lessons learnt from failures from the perspective of an investor, a successful entrepreneur and a tech expert.</p>
<p>The first talk in this episode is delivered by Sophie Yao, China Regional General Manager of Fenox Venture Capital, who shared 3 most “effective” ways to screw up a startup based on her experience working with startups. Problems include no market needs, wrong timing, management issues and also the way you spent the money, etc.</p>
<p>We also have Gen Kanai who used to grow communities of tens of thousands of Firefox users across Asia, to share the lessons he got from Firefox’s failures. Currently, he works as the Director Of Strategic Partnerships at Animoca Brands.</p>
<p>Prakhar Khandui (PK) is a serial entrepreneur who sold his company Pulse to Tencent-backed Hike Messenger in India. He also delivered 2 mistakes and 3 failures he learnt in this episode, for example, selling the startup too early is not a good choice.</p>
<p>Chinaccelerator’s 8X8 Speakers Series invite 8 of Chinaccelerator mentors - serial entrepreneurs, industry experts and investors - to share their personal stories about entrepreneurship twice a year in Beijing and Shanghai.</p>
<p>Show Notes:<br />
2:05 Sophie Yao’s talk<br />
13:39 Gen Kanai’s talk<br />
23:16 PK’s talk</p>
<p>Many thanks to our speakers Sophie Yao, Gen Kanai, and Prakhar Khanduj (PK), editor David and Geep, producer Eva Shi, organizer Chinaccelerator and sponsor People Squared. Be sure to check out our website www.chinaccelerator.com.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>How Can Failure Make You Strong; 8X8 Speakers Series (2/2) with Sophie Yao, Gen Kanai, and Prakhar Khanduj (PK)</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Chinaccelerator</itunes:author>
      <itunes:image href="https://image.simplecastcdn.com/images/a0e035/a0e0352f-fcbe-4ea1-813c-f1a09496ed52/c90446e9-67a2-46a9-9574-74ff7a51436a/3000x3000/1547697074artwork.jpg?aid=rss_feed"/>
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      <itunes:summary>The second episode of the 8X8 Speakers Series is about lessons learnt from failures from the perspective of an investor, a successful entrepreneur and a tech expert. 

The first talk in this episode is delivered by Sophie Yao, China Regional General Manager of Fenox Venture Capital, who shared 3 most “effective” ways to screw up a startup based on her experience working with startups. Problems include no market needs, wrong timing, management issues and also the way you spent the money, etc. 

We also have Gen Kanai who used to grow communities of tens of thousands of Firefox users across Asia, to share the lessons he got from Firefox’s failures. Currently, he works as the Director Of Strategic Partnerships at Animoca Brands.

Prakhar Khandui (PK) is a serial entrepreneur who sold his company Pulse to Tencent-backed Hike Messenger in India. He also delivered 2 mistakes and 3 failures he learnt in this episode, for example, selling the startup too early is not a good choice.

Chinaccelerator’s 8X8 Speakers Series invite 8 of Chinaccelerator mentors - serial entrepreneurs, industry experts and investors - to share their personal stories about entrepreneurship twice a year in Beijing and Shanghai.</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>The second episode of the 8X8 Speakers Series is about lessons learnt from failures from the perspective of an investor, a successful entrepreneur and a tech expert. 

The first talk in this episode is delivered by Sophie Yao, China Regional General Manager of Fenox Venture Capital, who shared 3 most “effective” ways to screw up a startup based on her experience working with startups. Problems include no market needs, wrong timing, management issues and also the way you spent the money, etc. 

We also have Gen Kanai who used to grow communities of tens of thousands of Firefox users across Asia, to share the lessons he got from Firefox’s failures. Currently, he works as the Director Of Strategic Partnerships at Animoca Brands.

Prakhar Khandui (PK) is a serial entrepreneur who sold his company Pulse to Tencent-backed Hike Messenger in India. He also delivered 2 mistakes and 3 failures he learnt in this episode, for example, selling the startup too early is not a good choice.

Chinaccelerator’s 8X8 Speakers Series invite 8 of Chinaccelerator mentors - serial entrepreneurs, industry experts and investors - to share their personal stories about entrepreneurship twice a year in Beijing and Shanghai.</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>money, mentors, fenox venture capital, china startup pulse, investor, management, hike messenger, failure, capital, grow, chinaccelerator, community, pulse, selling, entrepreneur, expert, firefox, mistake, strategy, startups, tencent, tech, m&amp;a, market</itunes:keywords>
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      <title>Know Yourself and Be Yourself; 8X8 Speakers Series (1/2) with Dalida Turkovic, Em Roblin and Andrew Schorr</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>8X8 Speakers Series is back! Today, we are happy to present you the first 3 talks selected from Chinaccelerator 8X8 Speakers Series events in Autumn 2018 about how knowing yourself matters while running your business. Em Robin, Founder of Inner Circles, is a female entrepreneur for 8 years who shared “Entrepreneurship is about sharing what you created”. Founder of Beijing Mindfulness Centre Dalida Turkovic shared her personal journey including how she experienced the depression and financial crisis. Andrew Schorr, Founder of Grata, delivered his insights about how crucial it is to be honest with yourself, have passion and experiment.</p>
<p>Chinaccelerator’s 8X8 Speakers Series invite 8 of Chinaccelerator mentors - serial entrepreneurs, industry experts and investors - to share their personal stories about entrepreneurship twice a year in Beijing and Shanghai.</p>
<p>Show Notes:</p>
<p>01:44 Em Roblin’s Talk</p>
<p>10:57 Dalida Turkovic’s Talk</p>
<p>22:12 Andrew Schorr’s Talk</p>
<p>Many thanks to our speakers Em Roblin, Dalida Turkovic and Andrew Schorr, editor David and Geep, producer Eva Shi, organizer Chinaccelerator and sponsor People Squared. Be sure to check out our website www.chinaccelerator.com.</p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Wed, 9 Jan 2019 03:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Chinaccelerator)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>8X8 Speakers Series is back! Today, we are happy to present you the first 3 talks selected from Chinaccelerator 8X8 Speakers Series events in Autumn 2018 about how knowing yourself matters while running your business. Em Robin, Founder of Inner Circles, is a female entrepreneur for 8 years who shared “Entrepreneurship is about sharing what you created”. Founder of Beijing Mindfulness Centre Dalida Turkovic shared her personal journey including how she experienced the depression and financial crisis. Andrew Schorr, Founder of Grata, delivered his insights about how crucial it is to be honest with yourself, have passion and experiment.</p>
<p>Chinaccelerator’s 8X8 Speakers Series invite 8 of Chinaccelerator mentors - serial entrepreneurs, industry experts and investors - to share their personal stories about entrepreneurship twice a year in Beijing and Shanghai.</p>
<p>Show Notes:</p>
<p>01:44 Em Roblin’s Talk</p>
<p>10:57 Dalida Turkovic’s Talk</p>
<p>22:12 Andrew Schorr’s Talk</p>
<p>Many thanks to our speakers Em Roblin, Dalida Turkovic and Andrew Schorr, editor David and Geep, producer Eva Shi, organizer Chinaccelerator and sponsor People Squared. Be sure to check out our website www.chinaccelerator.com.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>Know Yourself and Be Yourself; 8X8 Speakers Series (1/2) with Dalida Turkovic, Em Roblin and Andrew Schorr</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Chinaccelerator</itunes:author>
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      <itunes:duration>00:30:38</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>8X8 Speakers Series is back! Today, we are happy to present you the first 3 talks selected from Chinaccelerator 8X8 Speakers Series events in Autumn 2018 about how knowing yourself matters while running your business. Em Robin, Founder of Inner Circles, is a female entrepreneur for 8 years who shared “Entrepreneurship is about sharing what you created”. Founder of Beijing Mindfulness Centre Dalida Turkovic shared her personal journey including how she experienced the depression and financial crisis. Andrew Schorr, Founder of Grata, delivered his insights about how important it is to be honest with yourself, have passion and experiment.</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>8X8 Speakers Series is back! Today, we are happy to present you the first 3 talks selected from Chinaccelerator 8X8 Speakers Series events in Autumn 2018 about how knowing yourself matters while running your business. Em Robin, Founder of Inner Circles, is a female entrepreneur for 8 years who shared “Entrepreneurship is about sharing what you created”. Founder of Beijing Mindfulness Centre Dalida Turkovic shared her personal journey including how she experienced the depression and financial crisis. Andrew Schorr, Founder of Grata, delivered his insights about how important it is to be honest with yourself, have passion and experiment.</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>accelerator, creator, experiment, wechat, investor, vc, serial entrepreneur, sharing, chinaccelerator, mindfulness, entrepreneur, business, female entrepreneur, shanghai, beijing, passion, investment</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
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      <title>China’s Role in 4 Investment Areas with Sean O’Sullivan, Managing General Partner of SOSV</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>Happy New Year everyone! Today we invited Sean O’Sullivan, Founder and Managing General Partner of SOSV, the fund behind Chinaccelerator, to start the Year 2019 for China Startup Pulse and our listeners. In this episode, Sean shared his experience in China and provided his analysis of the investment trends in biotech, food tech, hardware, and software areas. Also, he pointed out the role of China in the global technology ecosystem and the impact that US-China trade war will have on startups and investors.</p>
<p>Sean’s entrepreneur life started in 1985 as a founder of MapInfo, bringing street mapping technology to personal computers. MapInfo went on to become a $200 million public company. He is also the co-creator of the term  “cloud computing”. Now, Sean is managing SOSV, a Venture Capital firm which is running 6 accelerators in the world supporting investments in over 700 startups.</p>
<p>Show notes:<br />
2:20 What brought Sean to China in the 1990s</p>
<p>3:24 Start in Dalian</p>
<p>6:20 Examples in Food Tech</p>
<p>12:20 Chinese investors’ growing interest in Biotech companies</p>
<p>13:57 Investing in the education industry</p>
<p>16:41 Other important areas in China, such as machine learning</p>
<p>18:57 Hardware accelerator HAX’s Chinese portfolio</p>
<p>21:25 The perceptions of Chinese technologies from investors out of China</p>
<p>24:25 How the US-China trade war impacts the startups and investors</p>
<p>26:38 Sean’s opinions on the fast-growing Chinese software companies such as TikTok</p>
<p>28:10 Sean’s predictions about China in 2019</p>
<p>Many thanks to our host Oscar Ramos and guest Sean O'Sullivan , editor David and Geep, producer Eva Shi, organizer Chinaccelerator and sponsor People Squared. Be sure to check out our website www.chinaccelerator.com.</p>
<p>Again, thanks to all of our listeners for the support in 2018 and the team is looking forward to providing more insights in 2019.</p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Thu, 3 Jan 2019 03:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Chinaccelerator)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Happy New Year everyone! Today we invited Sean O’Sullivan, Founder and Managing General Partner of SOSV, the fund behind Chinaccelerator, to start the Year 2019 for China Startup Pulse and our listeners. In this episode, Sean shared his experience in China and provided his analysis of the investment trends in biotech, food tech, hardware, and software areas. Also, he pointed out the role of China in the global technology ecosystem and the impact that US-China trade war will have on startups and investors.</p>
<p>Sean’s entrepreneur life started in 1985 as a founder of MapInfo, bringing street mapping technology to personal computers. MapInfo went on to become a $200 million public company. He is also the co-creator of the term  “cloud computing”. Now, Sean is managing SOSV, a Venture Capital firm which is running 6 accelerators in the world supporting investments in over 700 startups.</p>
<p>Show notes:<br />
2:20 What brought Sean to China in the 1990s</p>
<p>3:24 Start in Dalian</p>
<p>6:20 Examples in Food Tech</p>
<p>12:20 Chinese investors’ growing interest in Biotech companies</p>
<p>13:57 Investing in the education industry</p>
<p>16:41 Other important areas in China, such as machine learning</p>
<p>18:57 Hardware accelerator HAX’s Chinese portfolio</p>
<p>21:25 The perceptions of Chinese technologies from investors out of China</p>
<p>24:25 How the US-China trade war impacts the startups and investors</p>
<p>26:38 Sean’s opinions on the fast-growing Chinese software companies such as TikTok</p>
<p>28:10 Sean’s predictions about China in 2019</p>
<p>Many thanks to our host Oscar Ramos and guest Sean O'Sullivan , editor David and Geep, producer Eva Shi, organizer Chinaccelerator and sponsor People Squared. Be sure to check out our website www.chinaccelerator.com.</p>
<p>Again, thanks to all of our listeners for the support in 2018 and the team is looking forward to providing more insights in 2019.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>China’s Role in 4 Investment Areas with Sean O’Sullivan, Managing General Partner of SOSV</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Chinaccelerator</itunes:author>
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      <itunes:duration>00:32:18</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>Happy New Year everyone! Today we invited Sean O’Sullivan, Founder and Managing General Partner of SOSV, the fund behind Chinaccelerator, to start the Year 2019 for China Startup Pulse and our listeners. In this episode, Sean shared his experience in China and provided his analysis of the investment trends in biotech, food tech, hardware, and software areas. Also, he pointed out the role of China in the global technology ecosystem and the impact that US-China trade war will have on startups and investors.

Sean’s entrepreneur life started in 1985 as a founder of MapInfo, bringing street mapping technology to personal computers. MapInfo went on to become a $200 million public company. He is also the co-creator of the term  “cloud computing”. Now, Sean is managing SOSV, a Venture Capital firm which is running 6 accelerators in the world supporting investments in over 700 startups.</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>Happy New Year everyone! Today we invited Sean O’Sullivan, Founder and Managing General Partner of SOSV, the fund behind Chinaccelerator, to start the Year 2019 for China Startup Pulse and our listeners. In this episode, Sean shared his experience in China and provided his analysis of the investment trends in biotech, food tech, hardware, and software areas. Also, he pointed out the role of China in the global technology ecosystem and the impact that US-China trade war will have on startups and investors.

Sean’s entrepreneur life started in 1985 as a founder of MapInfo, bringing street mapping technology to personal computers. MapInfo went on to become a $200 million public company. He is also the co-creator of the term  “cloud computing”. Now, Sean is managing SOSV, a Venture Capital firm which is running 6 accelerators in the world supporting investments in over 700 startups.</itunes:subtitle>
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      <title>How VCs do due diligence: blockchain and priorities with Aly Madhavji and Mansoor Madhavji, Partners of Blockchain Founders Fund</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>In the second episode of our series on due diligence, we learn from Blockchain Founders Fund about how they evaluate blockchain startups and what they specifically look for in the due diligence process.</p>
<p>Recording from Money 20/20 China in Hangzhou, our host Oscar Ramos had an in-depth discussion with Aly Madhavji and Mansoor Madhavji, partners of the Blockchain Founders Fund, who shared their insights about their due diligence process, strategy and preferences when evaluating blockchain projects, and the examples how they work with early-stage projects, which is also illuminating for other startups. Here are some keywords they mentioned: Trust, product, traction, finance, etc.</p>
<p>Show Notes:<br />
01:32 Introducing Aly and Mansoor</p>
<p>03:00 Portfolio and their Investment Strategy &amp; Philosophy</p>
<p>06:10 How do they work globally?</p>
<p>07:21 Stages of Investment</p>
<p>07:35 First Step in Due Diligence for Blockchain</p>
<p>10:37 Transparency and Trust Matters</p>
<p>11:54 Checking Background and Company’s Strategies</p>
<p>13:30 How do companies react to your due diligence and how does that matter</p>
<p>14:38 Bringing in External Parties to the Due Diligence Process</p>
<p>15:23 Other Important Areas for Due Diligence</p>
<p>16:48 Product Evaluation in Blockchain Companies</p>
<p>19:06 Role of Stress Test</p>
<p>20:10 Measuring Traction and Evaluating Analytics</p>
<p>22:08 Financial Due Diligence</p>
<p>25:52 Their Perspectives on Startups Outsourcing Key Team Roles (e.g. CFO)</p>
<p>27:41 Do they look into Cliffs?  28:55 Additional Tips from Aly and Mansoor</p>
<p>30:29 Due Diligence in East Asia</p>
<p>32:37 Contact Information and Signing Out</p>
<p>Contact them!<br />
Twitter: @BlockchainFF<br />
Twitter: @aly_madhavji<br />
Email: mansoor@blockchainff.com</p>
<p>Companies mentioned:<br />
https://www.cryptyk.com/<br />
https://every.shop/<br />
https://www.taloflow.ai/</p>
<p>Many thanks to our host Oscar Ramos and guest Aly Madhavji and Mansoor Madhavji , editor David and Geep, producer Eva Shi, organizer Chinaccelerator and sponsor People Squared. Be sure to check out our website www.chinaccelerator.com.</p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Wed, 12 Dec 2018 03:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Chinaccelerator)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>In the second episode of our series on due diligence, we learn from Blockchain Founders Fund about how they evaluate blockchain startups and what they specifically look for in the due diligence process.</p>
<p>Recording from Money 20/20 China in Hangzhou, our host Oscar Ramos had an in-depth discussion with Aly Madhavji and Mansoor Madhavji, partners of the Blockchain Founders Fund, who shared their insights about their due diligence process, strategy and preferences when evaluating blockchain projects, and the examples how they work with early-stage projects, which is also illuminating for other startups. Here are some keywords they mentioned: Trust, product, traction, finance, etc.</p>
<p>Show Notes:<br />
01:32 Introducing Aly and Mansoor</p>
<p>03:00 Portfolio and their Investment Strategy &amp; Philosophy</p>
<p>06:10 How do they work globally?</p>
<p>07:21 Stages of Investment</p>
<p>07:35 First Step in Due Diligence for Blockchain</p>
<p>10:37 Transparency and Trust Matters</p>
<p>11:54 Checking Background and Company’s Strategies</p>
<p>13:30 How do companies react to your due diligence and how does that matter</p>
<p>14:38 Bringing in External Parties to the Due Diligence Process</p>
<p>15:23 Other Important Areas for Due Diligence</p>
<p>16:48 Product Evaluation in Blockchain Companies</p>
<p>19:06 Role of Stress Test</p>
<p>20:10 Measuring Traction and Evaluating Analytics</p>
<p>22:08 Financial Due Diligence</p>
<p>25:52 Their Perspectives on Startups Outsourcing Key Team Roles (e.g. CFO)</p>
<p>27:41 Do they look into Cliffs?  28:55 Additional Tips from Aly and Mansoor</p>
<p>30:29 Due Diligence in East Asia</p>
<p>32:37 Contact Information and Signing Out</p>
<p>Contact them!<br />
Twitter: @BlockchainFF<br />
Twitter: @aly_madhavji<br />
Email: mansoor@blockchainff.com</p>
<p>Companies mentioned:<br />
https://www.cryptyk.com/<br />
https://every.shop/<br />
https://www.taloflow.ai/</p>
<p>Many thanks to our host Oscar Ramos and guest Aly Madhavji and Mansoor Madhavji , editor David and Geep, producer Eva Shi, organizer Chinaccelerator and sponsor People Squared. Be sure to check out our website www.chinaccelerator.com.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>How VCs do due diligence: blockchain and priorities with Aly Madhavji and Mansoor Madhavji, Partners of Blockchain Founders Fund</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Chinaccelerator</itunes:author>
      <itunes:image href="https://image.simplecastcdn.com/images/a0e035/a0e0352f-fcbe-4ea1-813c-f1a09496ed52/f3793f73-dac3-4d99-adf3-f01a8bca74c8/3000x3000/1544582365artwork.jpg?aid=rss_feed"/>
      <itunes:duration>00:34:01</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>In the second episode of our series on due diligence, we learn from Blockchain Founders Fund about how they evaluate blockchain startups and what they specifically look for in the due diligence process.

Recording from Money 20/20 China in Hangzhou, our host Oscar Ramos had an in-depth discussion with Aly Madhavji and Mansoor Madhavji, partners of the Blockchain Founders Fund, who shared their insights about the due diligence process, strategy and preferences when evaluating blockchain projects, and the examples how they work with early stage projects, which is also illuminating for other startups. Here are some keywords they mentioned: Trust, product, traction, finance, etc.</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>In the second episode of our series on due diligence, we learn from Blockchain Founders Fund about how they evaluate blockchain startups and what they specifically look for in the due diligence process.

Recording from Money 20/20 China in Hangzhou, our host Oscar Ramos had an in-depth discussion with Aly Madhavji and Mansoor Madhavji, partners of the Blockchain Founders Fund, who shared their insights about the due diligence process, strategy and preferences when evaluating blockchain projects, and the examples how they work with early stage projects, which is also illuminating for other startups. Here are some keywords they mentioned: Trust, product, traction, finance, etc.</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>early stage, accelerator, team, vechain, transparency, vc, east asia, founders, chinaccelerator, sosv, stress test, product, due diligence, blockchain founders fund, venture capital, metrics, finance, blockchain, entrepreneurs, traction, investment</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:episode>87</itunes:episode>
    </item>
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      <title>How VCs do due diligence: metrics and team with Carman Chan, Founder &amp; Managing Partner of Click Ventures</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>Entrepreneurs looking for funding can not escape from the due diligence from investors. In order to have more founders to understand the process of investment due diligence, we are introducing a new and special series, where we talk with investors about due diligence.</p>
<p>Recording from Money 20/20 China in Hangzhou, Oscar Ramos talked with Carman Chan, Founder and Managing Partner of Click Ventures who successfully invested in Spotify, Meetup and many tech companies.  </p>
<p>In this episode, Chan shared insights on how they evaluate traction, team, product as well as what founders should have prepared for investors, the proper plan for companies to work on and lastly the differences in Asia versus the West regarding due diligence.</p>
<p>Show Notes:</p>
<p>1:32 Carman Chan’s strong background in data and mathematics</p>
<p>2:08 Introducing Click Ventures, investment thesis and projects</p>
<p>3:38 Due Diligence process</p>
<p>4:25 Importance of company metrics</p>
<p>6:36 Best tools to measure traction</p>
<p>8:30 Red flags Carman met in the process</p>
<p>10:30 Due Diligence in product</p>
<p>12:47 Product roadmap</p>
<p>13:20 Importance of the founding team</p>
<p>14:04 Missing team members</p>
<p>15:07 Team related problems in Due Diligence</p>
<p>15:55 Other parts Carman evaluates including advisors, founder vesting plan, etc</p>
<p>17:22 Relationship with co-investors in Due Diligence</p>
<p>18:25 Differences in Asian Companies compared to those from other countries</p>
<p>22:11 Contact Information and Signing Off</p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Thu, 29 Nov 2018 03:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Chinaccelerator)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Entrepreneurs looking for funding can not escape from the due diligence from investors. In order to have more founders to understand the process of investment due diligence, we are introducing a new and special series, where we talk with investors about due diligence.</p>
<p>Recording from Money 20/20 China in Hangzhou, Oscar Ramos talked with Carman Chan, Founder and Managing Partner of Click Ventures who successfully invested in Spotify, Meetup and many tech companies.  </p>
<p>In this episode, Chan shared insights on how they evaluate traction, team, product as well as what founders should have prepared for investors, the proper plan for companies to work on and lastly the differences in Asia versus the West regarding due diligence.</p>
<p>Show Notes:</p>
<p>1:32 Carman Chan’s strong background in data and mathematics</p>
<p>2:08 Introducing Click Ventures, investment thesis and projects</p>
<p>3:38 Due Diligence process</p>
<p>4:25 Importance of company metrics</p>
<p>6:36 Best tools to measure traction</p>
<p>8:30 Red flags Carman met in the process</p>
<p>10:30 Due Diligence in product</p>
<p>12:47 Product roadmap</p>
<p>13:20 Importance of the founding team</p>
<p>14:04 Missing team members</p>
<p>15:07 Team related problems in Due Diligence</p>
<p>15:55 Other parts Carman evaluates including advisors, founder vesting plan, etc</p>
<p>17:22 Relationship with co-investors in Due Diligence</p>
<p>18:25 Differences in Asian Companies compared to those from other countries</p>
<p>22:11 Contact Information and Signing Off</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>How VCs do due diligence: metrics and team with Carman Chan, Founder &amp; Managing Partner of Click Ventures</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Chinaccelerator</itunes:author>
      <itunes:image href="https://image.simplecastcdn.com/images/a0e035/a0e0352f-fcbe-4ea1-813c-f1a09496ed52/2463552b-c477-433d-b3b4-b255338286f2/3000x3000/1543457964artwork.jpg?aid=rss_feed"/>
      <itunes:duration>00:23:29</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>Entrepreneurs looking for funding can not escape from the due diligence from investors. In order to have more founders to understand the process of investment due diligence, we are introducing a new and special series, where we talk with investors about due diligence. 

Recording from Money 20/20 China in Hangzhou, Oscar Ramos talked with Carman Chan, Founder and Managing Partner of Click Ventures who successfully invested in Spotify, Meetup and many tech companies.  

In this episode, Chan shared insights on how they evaluate traction, team, product, as well as what founders should have prepared for investors, the proper plan for companies to work on and lastly the differences in Asia versus the West regarding due diligence.</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>Entrepreneurs looking for funding can not escape from the due diligence from investors. In order to have more founders to understand the process of investment due diligence, we are introducing a new and special series, where we talk with investors about due diligence. 

Recording from Money 20/20 China in Hangzhou, Oscar Ramos talked with Carman Chan, Founder and Managing Partner of Click Ventures who successfully invested in Spotify, Meetup and many tech companies.  

In this episode, Chan shared insights on how they evaluate traction, team, product, as well as what founders should have prepared for investors, the proper plan for companies to work on and lastly the differences in Asia versus the West regarding due diligence.</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>accelerator, team, due dilligence, vc, co-investment, meetup, founders, chinaccelerator, click ventures, spotify, product, venture capital, carman chan, entrepreneurs, traction, asia, investment</itunes:keywords>
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      <title>UX Best Practices and Product Localization for Chinese Consumers with Samuel Jesse, Co-Founder of UXSPOT</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>What’s the differences between Chinese market and international market in terms of User Experience (UX)? What’s the key principles to localize your design for Chinese market? Samuel Jesse is the right person to talk with who co-founded a UX research lab UXSPOT in Shanghai. With 10 years of experience in UX, we talked with Samuel about his experience working with Chinese clients as an International designer, UX practices for Chinese consumers, Why mobile is crucial and more about product localization. Here’s a short quote from Samuel , “when something is [well] designed, it gives that perception of trust, it transfers that perception of quality.”</p>
<p>Show Notes:</p>
<p>00:00 Introduction &amp; Summary</p>
<p>01:20 Introducing Samuel Jesse</p>
<p>2:00 Moving from Beijing to Shanghai</p>
<p>2:46 Working with Chinese Clients</p>
<p>3:40 Shanghai vs Beijing Environments</p>
<p>4:31 Initial UX Design Projects with Local Clients</p>
<p>6:14 Change in Chinese attitudes towards UX</p>
<p>7:31 A UX Research Lab in China</p>
<p>9:10 UX Approach and Test in Chinese market</p>
<p>10:21 Importance of Mobile</p>
<p>11:14 Differences between Chinese consumers and international market</p>
<p>12:48 Issues in Translation</p>
<p>14:10 User Verification for Mobile Users</p>
<p>14:45 UX Best Practices in China</p>
<p>16:20 Establishing Trust through Design</p>
<p>18:08 Good Design in China</p>
<p>19:40 International and Chinese UX Differences From Design Perspective</p>
<p>20:40 Implications of Familiarity with Local Companies</p>
<p>22:55 Copy-Cat Culture in China</p>
<p>25:03 Chinese Companies going International</p>
<p>26:34 Over-Localization</p>
<p>27:33 Contact Information and Sign Off</p>
<p>Many thanks to our host Oscar Ramos and guest Samuel Jesse, editor David and Geep, producer Eva Shi, organizer Chinaccelerator and sponsor People Squared. Be sure to check out our website www.chinaccelerator.com.</p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Wed, 21 Nov 2018 04:07:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Chinaccelerator)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>What’s the differences between Chinese market and international market in terms of User Experience (UX)? What’s the key principles to localize your design for Chinese market? Samuel Jesse is the right person to talk with who co-founded a UX research lab UXSPOT in Shanghai. With 10 years of experience in UX, we talked with Samuel about his experience working with Chinese clients as an International designer, UX practices for Chinese consumers, Why mobile is crucial and more about product localization. Here’s a short quote from Samuel , “when something is [well] designed, it gives that perception of trust, it transfers that perception of quality.”</p>
<p>Show Notes:</p>
<p>00:00 Introduction &amp; Summary</p>
<p>01:20 Introducing Samuel Jesse</p>
<p>2:00 Moving from Beijing to Shanghai</p>
<p>2:46 Working with Chinese Clients</p>
<p>3:40 Shanghai vs Beijing Environments</p>
<p>4:31 Initial UX Design Projects with Local Clients</p>
<p>6:14 Change in Chinese attitudes towards UX</p>
<p>7:31 A UX Research Lab in China</p>
<p>9:10 UX Approach and Test in Chinese market</p>
<p>10:21 Importance of Mobile</p>
<p>11:14 Differences between Chinese consumers and international market</p>
<p>12:48 Issues in Translation</p>
<p>14:10 User Verification for Mobile Users</p>
<p>14:45 UX Best Practices in China</p>
<p>16:20 Establishing Trust through Design</p>
<p>18:08 Good Design in China</p>
<p>19:40 International and Chinese UX Differences From Design Perspective</p>
<p>20:40 Implications of Familiarity with Local Companies</p>
<p>22:55 Copy-Cat Culture in China</p>
<p>25:03 Chinese Companies going International</p>
<p>26:34 Over-Localization</p>
<p>27:33 Contact Information and Sign Off</p>
<p>Many thanks to our host Oscar Ramos and guest Samuel Jesse, editor David and Geep, producer Eva Shi, organizer Chinaccelerator and sponsor People Squared. Be sure to check out our website www.chinaccelerator.com.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>UX Best Practices and Product Localization for Chinese Consumers with Samuel Jesse, Co-Founder of UXSPOT</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Chinaccelerator</itunes:author>
      <itunes:image href="https://image.simplecastcdn.com/images/a0e035/a0e0352f-fcbe-4ea1-813c-f1a09496ed52/cb7e5bad-25c8-4532-8c4c-2d95c7fce0b1/3000x3000/1542773530artwork.jpg?aid=rss_feed"/>
      <itunes:duration>00:28:30</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>What are the differences between the Chinese market and international market regarding User Experience (UX)? What are the crucial principles to localize your design for the Chinese market? Samuel Jesse is the right person to talk with who co-founded a UX research lab UXSPOT in Shanghai. With 10 years of experience in UX, we talked with Samuel about his experience working with Chinese clients as an International designer, UX practices for Chinese consumers, Why mobile is crucial and more about product localization. Here’s a short quote from Samuel , “when something is [well] designed, it gives that perception of trust, it transfers that perception of quality.”</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>What are the differences between the Chinese market and international market regarding User Experience (UX)? What are the crucial principles to localize your design for the Chinese market? Samuel Jesse is the right person to talk with who co-founded a UX research lab UXSPOT in Shanghai. With 10 years of experience in UX, we talked with Samuel about his experience working with Chinese clients as an International designer, UX practices for Chinese consumers, Why mobile is crucial and more about product localization. Here’s a short quote from Samuel , “when something is [well] designed, it gives that perception of trust, it transfers that perception of quality.”</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>accelerator, designer, user experience, international, chinese consumers, china, trust, social, qr code, translation, chinaccelerator, mobile, copy-cat, product localization, research, culture, shanghai, localize, ux</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:episode>85</itunes:episode>
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      <title>Bridging the gap between China-India startup ecosystems with PK, co-founder of InstaLively and Pulse (Acquired by Hike Messenger)</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>PK is an Indian entrepreneur and angel investor in social network, content and live-stream space who built, grew and finally sold his startups InstaLively and Pulse to Tencent-owned company Hike Messenger. After selling them, PK came to China for new opportunities and challenges where he started being a consultant for Various Startups which helps China-India Startups and VCs in building the next billion Internet users in Indonesia and India, as well as mentoring founders for Chinaccelerator.</p>
<p>In this episode, PK shared his journey about selling startups to Tencent and also delivered insights about the China-India startup and investment ecosystem, including the challenges to localize Chinese companies in India and how the Chinese data drive model works in India, etc.</p>
<p>Show Notes:<br />
1:00 Introducing PK<br />
1:37 Introducing InstaLively<br />
2:51 Process of Tencent Buy-Out<br />
6:57 Experience with Mergers and Acquisition<br />
9:28 Transition with Hike Messenger<br />
10:10 Difficulties from culture differences<br />
11:50 Due Diligence<br />
13:30 Alignment with the new team<br />
15:02 Moving to Beijing and the experience in China<br />
17:20 China-India tech ecosystem<br />
20:45 The Belt and Road Initiative in China<br />
23:01 Advantages and obstacles of Chinese investment and startups in India<br />
26:05 Challenges for Chinese companies to localize in India<br />
28:20 What works in China doesn’t necessarily work in India<br />
30:19 Will Indian companies be able to come to China?<br />
31:38 PK’s future plans<br />
32:20 Contact PK (Full name: Prakhar Khanduja)</p>
<p>Feel free to leave a comment and start a conversation with us! If you have an ideal guest whom you would like to listen to, please let us know and we'll do our best to realize it!</p>
<p>Many thanks to our host Oscar Ramos and guest PK, producer Eva Shi, editor David and Geep, organizer Chinaccelerator and sponsor People Squared. Be sure to check out our website www.chinaccelerator.com</p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Wed, 14 Nov 2018 03:51:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Chinaccelerator)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>PK is an Indian entrepreneur and angel investor in social network, content and live-stream space who built, grew and finally sold his startups InstaLively and Pulse to Tencent-owned company Hike Messenger. After selling them, PK came to China for new opportunities and challenges where he started being a consultant for Various Startups which helps China-India Startups and VCs in building the next billion Internet users in Indonesia and India, as well as mentoring founders for Chinaccelerator.</p>
<p>In this episode, PK shared his journey about selling startups to Tencent and also delivered insights about the China-India startup and investment ecosystem, including the challenges to localize Chinese companies in India and how the Chinese data drive model works in India, etc.</p>
<p>Show Notes:<br />
1:00 Introducing PK<br />
1:37 Introducing InstaLively<br />
2:51 Process of Tencent Buy-Out<br />
6:57 Experience with Mergers and Acquisition<br />
9:28 Transition with Hike Messenger<br />
10:10 Difficulties from culture differences<br />
11:50 Due Diligence<br />
13:30 Alignment with the new team<br />
15:02 Moving to Beijing and the experience in China<br />
17:20 China-India tech ecosystem<br />
20:45 The Belt and Road Initiative in China<br />
23:01 Advantages and obstacles of Chinese investment and startups in India<br />
26:05 Challenges for Chinese companies to localize in India<br />
28:20 What works in China doesn’t necessarily work in India<br />
30:19 Will Indian companies be able to come to China?<br />
31:38 PK’s future plans<br />
32:20 Contact PK (Full name: Prakhar Khanduja)</p>
<p>Feel free to leave a comment and start a conversation with us! If you have an ideal guest whom you would like to listen to, please let us know and we'll do our best to realize it!</p>
<p>Many thanks to our host Oscar Ramos and guest PK, producer Eva Shi, editor David and Geep, organizer Chinaccelerator and sponsor People Squared. Be sure to check out our website www.chinaccelerator.com</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>Bridging the gap between China-India startup ecosystems with PK, co-founder of InstaLively and Pulse (Acquired by Hike Messenger)</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Chinaccelerator</itunes:author>
      <itunes:image href="https://image.simplecastcdn.com/images/a0e035/a0e0352f-fcbe-4ea1-813c-f1a09496ed52/8dcade6c-6f38-40e5-a0f6-2afd4f10209f/3000x3000/1542168180artwork.jpg?aid=rss_feed"/>
      <itunes:duration>00:33:23</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>PK is an Indian entrepreneur and angel investor in social network, content and live-stream space who built, grew and finally sold his startups InstaLively and Pulse to Tencent-owned company Hike Messenger. After selling them, PK came to China for new opportunities and challenges where he started being a consultant for Various Startups which helps China-India Startups and VCs in building the next billion Internet users in Indonesia and India, as well as mentoring founders for Chinaccelerator. 

In this episode, PK shared his journey about selling startups to Tencent and also delivered insights about the China-India startup and investment ecosystem, including the challenges to localize Chinese companies in India and how the Chinese data drive model works in India, etc.</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>PK is an Indian entrepreneur and angel investor in social network, content and live-stream space who built, grew and finally sold his startups InstaLively and Pulse to Tencent-owned company Hike Messenger. After selling them, PK came to China for new opportunities and challenges where he started being a consultant for Various Startups which helps China-India Startups and VCs in building the next billion Internet users in Indonesia and India, as well as mentoring founders for Chinaccelerator. 

In this episode, PK shared his journey about selling startups to Tencent and also delivered insights about the China-India startup and investment ecosystem, including the challenges to localize Chinese companies in India and how the Chinese data drive model works in India, etc.</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>accelerator, china-india, vc, the belt and road, hike messenger, acquisition, china, social, localization, chinaccelerator, consultant, technology, india, venture capital, content, mentor, livestream, startups, tencent, internet, m&amp;a, investment, mergers</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:episode>84</itunes:episode>
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      <title>Managing from Zero to IPO, with Ben Hu, Co-Founder, CTO and Head of Adult English of Liulishuo</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>Liulishuo is an AI-powered English language learning platform operated by the AI firm LAIX founded in 2012 and it went public on New York Stock Exchange in Sept 2018. We are lucky to have Ben Hu, Co-Founder, CTO and Head of Adult English of Liulishuo to share the first 6 months of starting the company, their early successes, the growth, as well as his insights about managing a team from 5 to 200 people. “Empathy and strategic thinking together make the management easier.”</p>
<p>As of June 30, 2018, Liulishuo has over 83.8 million registered users and 7.2 million average monthly active users in 175 countries. The average daily time per user is 60+ minutes.</p>
<p>Show Notes:</p>
<p>0:00 Summary<br />
1:24 Introducing Ben Hu<br />
2:13 What is Liulishuo?<br />
4:25 Artificial Intelligence’s Evolution and Change<br />
6:56 Ben Hu talks about the product launch and first version of Liulishuo<br />
9:05 Length and process from ideation to first launch<br />
10:44 Ben Hu shares about Liulishuo’s beta experience<br />
11:15 Engagement with Liulishuo’s beta user experience<br />
11:55 Metrics used in Early Days<br />
13:19 Ben’s advice for  past-Ben, in the Early Days of Liulishuo<br />
15:16 Practices for entering Chinese Markets<br />
19:17 Management in Liulishuo’s expansion<br />
22:10 How Hu developed management skills?<br />
24:00 Decision-making in Management<br />
25:36 Ben Hu’s management framework for unlocking potential<br />
28:34 Exciting technology in Education Space<br />
30:43 Wrapping Up and Closing Thoughts<br />
31:35 Contact Information and Job Postings<br />
31:52 Close Off and Partner Appreciation</p>
<p>Feel free to leave a comment! If you have an ideal guest whom you would like to listen to, please let us know and we'll do our best to realize it!</p>
<p>Many thanks to our host Oscar Ramos and guest Ben Hu, editor David and Geep, producer Eva Shi, organizer Chinaccelerator and sponsor People Squared. Be sure to check out our website www.chinaccelerator.com.</p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Thu, 8 Nov 2018 02:48:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Chinaccelerator)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Liulishuo is an AI-powered English language learning platform operated by the AI firm LAIX founded in 2012 and it went public on New York Stock Exchange in Sept 2018. We are lucky to have Ben Hu, Co-Founder, CTO and Head of Adult English of Liulishuo to share the first 6 months of starting the company, their early successes, the growth, as well as his insights about managing a team from 5 to 200 people. “Empathy and strategic thinking together make the management easier.”</p>
<p>As of June 30, 2018, Liulishuo has over 83.8 million registered users and 7.2 million average monthly active users in 175 countries. The average daily time per user is 60+ minutes.</p>
<p>Show Notes:</p>
<p>0:00 Summary<br />
1:24 Introducing Ben Hu<br />
2:13 What is Liulishuo?<br />
4:25 Artificial Intelligence’s Evolution and Change<br />
6:56 Ben Hu talks about the product launch and first version of Liulishuo<br />
9:05 Length and process from ideation to first launch<br />
10:44 Ben Hu shares about Liulishuo’s beta experience<br />
11:15 Engagement with Liulishuo’s beta user experience<br />
11:55 Metrics used in Early Days<br />
13:19 Ben’s advice for  past-Ben, in the Early Days of Liulishuo<br />
15:16 Practices for entering Chinese Markets<br />
19:17 Management in Liulishuo’s expansion<br />
22:10 How Hu developed management skills?<br />
24:00 Decision-making in Management<br />
25:36 Ben Hu’s management framework for unlocking potential<br />
28:34 Exciting technology in Education Space<br />
30:43 Wrapping Up and Closing Thoughts<br />
31:35 Contact Information and Job Postings<br />
31:52 Close Off and Partner Appreciation</p>
<p>Feel free to leave a comment! If you have an ideal guest whom you would like to listen to, please let us know and we'll do our best to realize it!</p>
<p>Many thanks to our host Oscar Ramos and guest Ben Hu, editor David and Geep, producer Eva Shi, organizer Chinaccelerator and sponsor People Squared. Be sure to check out our website www.chinaccelerator.com.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>Managing from Zero to IPO, with Ben Hu, Co-Founder, CTO and Head of Adult English of Liulishuo</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Chinaccelerator</itunes:author>
      <itunes:image href="https://image.simplecastcdn.com/images/a0e035/a0e0352f-fcbe-4ea1-813c-f1a09496ed52/fa628325-fa95-47a4-addc-e0d3661754bd/3000x3000/1541645939artwork.jpg?aid=rss_feed"/>
      <itunes:duration>00:32:49</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>Liulishuo is an AI-powered English language learning platform operated by the AI firm LAIX founded in 2012 and it went public on New York Stock Exchange in Sept 2018. We are lucky to have Ben Hu, Co-Founder, CTO and Head of Adult English of Liulishuo to share the first 6 months of starting the company, their early successes, the growth, as well as his insights about managing a team from 5 to 200 people. “Empathy and strategic thinking together make the management easier.”

As of June 30, 2018, Liulishuo has over 83.8 million registered users and 7.2 million average monthly active users in 175 countries. The average daily time per user is 60+ minutes.</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>Liulishuo is an AI-powered English language learning platform operated by the AI firm LAIX founded in 2012 and it went public on New York Stock Exchange in Sept 2018. We are lucky to have Ben Hu, Co-Founder, CTO and Head of Adult English of Liulishuo to share the first 6 months of starting the company, their early successes, the growth, as well as his insights about managing a team from 5 to 200 people. “Empathy and strategic thinking together make the management easier.”

As of June 30, 2018, Liulishuo has over 83.8 million registered users and 7.2 million average monthly active users in 175 countries. The average daily time per user is 60+ minutes.</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>accelerator, team management, artificial intelligence, vc, language learning, english, chinaccelerator, ai, venture capital, metrics, education, ipo, edtech, investment</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:episode>83</itunes:episode>
    </item>
    <item>
      <guid isPermaLink="false">b0be41ef-e3a5-4ef0-bfe8-d3b633d69f86</guid>
      <title>Leveraging WeChat ecosystem to build a profitable cross-border product with Drew Kirchhoff, Co-Founder and Head of Product of Yoli</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>Drew Kirchhoff is a product guy. After studying finance in the USA and working for a diamond investment firm in China, Drew became one of the most successful product managers to publish the game Crossy Road in the market achieving more than one hundred million downloads.</p>
<p>“A great product manager makes a great CEO”. After being a product manager, he co-founded Yoli which allows users to learn English directly through WeChat. He shared how he and his co-founders found the market opportunities driven by the advent of WeChat, how they launched the company, developed Yoli WeChat mini-program and later, he explored deeper in the technical area to improve the product.</p>
<p>Show Notes:<br />
1:20  Drew’s background and his experience in China<br />
5:50  Working in a mobile gaming company<br />
7:50  Brought the game Crossy Road to the market<br />
10:28 Performance of Crossy Road worldwide - 9/10 kids were playing the game<br />
11:38 Product management to being a WeChat Mini-program entrepreneur<br />
12:02 How WeChat changes Chinese business<br />
14:00 Formation, MVP launch and goal of Yoli<br />
21:40 Importance of Mini-programs for User Experience<br />
24:00 Relationship with funding and development<br />
26:30 Competing with huge competitors in the market<br />
26:52 Exciting developments in Yoli’s language education service<br />
30:50 Understanding Conversion Rates - from product to business<br />
33:30 Drew Kirchhoff’s contact information</p>
<p>Feel free to leave a comment and start a conversation with us! If you have an ideal guest whom you would like to listen to, please let us know and we'll do our best to realize it!</p>
<p>Many thanks to our host Oscar Ramos and guest Drew Kirchhoff, editor David and Geep, producer Eva Shi, organizer Chinaccelerator and sponsor People Squared. Be sure to check out our website www.chinaccelerator.com</p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Thu, 1 Nov 2018 03:04:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Chinaccelerator)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Drew Kirchhoff is a product guy. After studying finance in the USA and working for a diamond investment firm in China, Drew became one of the most successful product managers to publish the game Crossy Road in the market achieving more than one hundred million downloads.</p>
<p>“A great product manager makes a great CEO”. After being a product manager, he co-founded Yoli which allows users to learn English directly through WeChat. He shared how he and his co-founders found the market opportunities driven by the advent of WeChat, how they launched the company, developed Yoli WeChat mini-program and later, he explored deeper in the technical area to improve the product.</p>
<p>Show Notes:<br />
1:20  Drew’s background and his experience in China<br />
5:50  Working in a mobile gaming company<br />
7:50  Brought the game Crossy Road to the market<br />
10:28 Performance of Crossy Road worldwide - 9/10 kids were playing the game<br />
11:38 Product management to being a WeChat Mini-program entrepreneur<br />
12:02 How WeChat changes Chinese business<br />
14:00 Formation, MVP launch and goal of Yoli<br />
21:40 Importance of Mini-programs for User Experience<br />
24:00 Relationship with funding and development<br />
26:30 Competing with huge competitors in the market<br />
26:52 Exciting developments in Yoli’s language education service<br />
30:50 Understanding Conversion Rates - from product to business<br />
33:30 Drew Kirchhoff’s contact information</p>
<p>Feel free to leave a comment and start a conversation with us! If you have an ideal guest whom you would like to listen to, please let us know and we'll do our best to realize it!</p>
<p>Many thanks to our host Oscar Ramos and guest Drew Kirchhoff, editor David and Geep, producer Eva Shi, organizer Chinaccelerator and sponsor People Squared. Be sure to check out our website www.chinaccelerator.com</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>Leveraging WeChat ecosystem to build a profitable cross-border product with Drew Kirchhoff, Co-Founder and Head of Product of Yoli</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Chinaccelerator</itunes:author>
      <itunes:image href="https://image.simplecastcdn.com/images/a0e035/a0e0352f-fcbe-4ea1-813c-f1a09496ed52/c16bac1e-e5ca-4dcd-9427-82058833f5fc/3000x3000/1541042259artwork.jpg?aid=rss_feed"/>
      <itunes:duration>00:36:01</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>Drew Kirchhoff is a product guy. After studying finance in the USA and working for a diamond investment firm in China, Drew became one of the most successful product managers to publish the game Crossy Road in the market achieving more than one hundred million downloads.

“A great product manager makes a great CEO”. After being a product manager, he co-founded Yoli which allows users to learn English directly through WeChat. He shared how he and his co-founders found the market opportunities driven by the advent of WeChat, how they launched the company, developed Yoli WeChat mini-program and later, he explored deeper in the technical area to improve the product.</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>Drew Kirchhoff is a product guy. After studying finance in the USA and working for a diamond investment firm in China, Drew became one of the most successful product managers to publish the game Crossy Road in the market achieving more than one hundred million downloads.

“A great product manager makes a great CEO”. After being a product manager, he co-founded Yoli which allows users to learn English directly through WeChat. He shared how he and his co-founders found the market opportunities driven by the advent of WeChat, how they launched the company, developed Yoli WeChat mini-program and later, he explored deeper in the technical area to improve the product.</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>accelerator, mobile game, technical, game, mini-program, wechat, language, vc, english, chinaccelerator, product, startup, venture capital, entrepreneur, mvp, edtech, fund, learning, investment</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:episode>82</itunes:episode>
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      <title>How China&apos;s Media Digitalization Innovates Startups with Philip Beck, Chairman of Dubeta</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>Today we have invited Philip Beck, who has had more than 40 years experience in the social media and marketing industry in and out of China. He commented on China’s digital transformation and how it is infusing innovation into China’s startup space.</p>
<p>He continued on to discuss how agencies and big companies have created opportunities for new startups to capitalise on those opportunities and the changing profiles of startup founders that are building new companies</p>
<p>1:03 Philip Beck intro<br />
2:44 Social media industry in 2004<br />
4:16 Hongkong in 2014<br />
5:18 Not copycats, but local Chinese version<br />
7:10 Why Renren was a hit<br />
8:14 What was the media planning strategy back then<br />
10:14 Red envelop phenomenon<br />
13:52 Digitalisation of media<br />
15:52 New innovation in marketing in china - access to consumer data points - built a very strong consumer profile<br />
Tencent and alibaba<br />
Look alike profile<br />
20:29 How does Taobao and Tmall make money<br />
23:14 What else is happening in the media marketing space for startups<br />
25:50 Large agencies making acquisitions<br />
28:14 Robin 8’s changing team profile<br />
30:07 Changes in founders’ background<br />
31:35 How to connect with Philip</p>
<p>Feel free to leave a comment and start a conversation with us! If you have an ideal guest whom you would like to listen to, please let us know and we'll do our best to realize it!</p>
<p>Many thanks to our host Oscar Ramos and guest Philip Beck, editor David and Geep, producer Eva Shi &amp; Summer Xia , organizer Chinaccelerator and sponsor People Squared. Be sure to check out our website www.chinaccelerator.com</p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Wed, 24 Oct 2018 04:16:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Chinaccelerator)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Today we have invited Philip Beck, who has had more than 40 years experience in the social media and marketing industry in and out of China. He commented on China’s digital transformation and how it is infusing innovation into China’s startup space.</p>
<p>He continued on to discuss how agencies and big companies have created opportunities for new startups to capitalise on those opportunities and the changing profiles of startup founders that are building new companies</p>
<p>1:03 Philip Beck intro<br />
2:44 Social media industry in 2004<br />
4:16 Hongkong in 2014<br />
5:18 Not copycats, but local Chinese version<br />
7:10 Why Renren was a hit<br />
8:14 What was the media planning strategy back then<br />
10:14 Red envelop phenomenon<br />
13:52 Digitalisation of media<br />
15:52 New innovation in marketing in china - access to consumer data points - built a very strong consumer profile<br />
Tencent and alibaba<br />
Look alike profile<br />
20:29 How does Taobao and Tmall make money<br />
23:14 What else is happening in the media marketing space for startups<br />
25:50 Large agencies making acquisitions<br />
28:14 Robin 8’s changing team profile<br />
30:07 Changes in founders’ background<br />
31:35 How to connect with Philip</p>
<p>Feel free to leave a comment and start a conversation with us! If you have an ideal guest whom you would like to listen to, please let us know and we'll do our best to realize it!</p>
<p>Many thanks to our host Oscar Ramos and guest Philip Beck, editor David and Geep, producer Eva Shi &amp; Summer Xia , organizer Chinaccelerator and sponsor People Squared. Be sure to check out our website www.chinaccelerator.com</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>How China&apos;s Media Digitalization Innovates Startups with Philip Beck, Chairman of Dubeta</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Chinaccelerator</itunes:author>
      <itunes:image href="https://image.simplecastcdn.com/images/a0e035/a0e0352f-fcbe-4ea1-813c-f1a09496ed52/b439f42f-b144-4997-9641-98b0ab69695a/3000x3000/1540355161artwork.jpg?aid=rss_feed"/>
      <itunes:duration>00:32:29</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>Today we have invited Philip Beck, who has had more than 40 years experience in the social media and marketing industry in and out of China. He commented on China’s digital transformation and how it is infusing innovation into China’s startup space.

He continued on to discuss how agencies and big companies have created opportunities for new startups to capitalise on those opportunities and the changing profiles of startup founders that are building new companies </itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>Today we have invited Philip Beck, who has had more than 40 years experience in the social media and marketing industry in and out of China. He commented on China’s digital transformation and how it is infusing innovation into China’s startup space.

He continued on to discuss how agencies and big companies have created opportunities for new startups to capitalise on those opportunities and the changing profiles of startup founders that are building new companies </itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>accelerator, consumer, branding, marketing, alibaba, media, vc, agency, founders, social media, venture capital, innovation, startups, tencent, investment</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:episode>81</itunes:episode>
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    <item>
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      <title>The Breakthroughs of Voice AI Technologies with Chen Wei, Senior Director and Chief Scientist of Sogou Voice Interaction Technology Centre</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>The system of human perceptions is multi-faceted and voice is one of the perceptions that people pay the most attention to in Artificial Intelligence areas. Sogou established a speech recognition team in 2012 to explore technologies such as intelligent voice and machine translation. Now it is obviously a leader in the Chinese voice technology field.</p>
<p>In this episode, we’ve invited Chen Wei, the Chief Scientist of Sogou Voice Interaction Technology Centre, to introduce the technological breakthroughs in speech recognition, machine translation and speech synthesis behind Sogou translation products.</p>
<p>Chen Wei and his team also developed the Zhiyin OS system which is a system with multi-modal perception capabilities including speech recognition, handwriting recognition and lip-reading ability. The edge of this technology also extends to areas such as hardware and visual identification.</p>
<p>Perks for our listeners: You can find a promotion code to get free tickets for <strong>NewCo Shanghai 2018</strong> in this episode. Limited tickets and first come, first serve. https://chinaccelerator.com/newco-shanghai-2018/</p>
<p>Show notes:<br />
01:23 Introduce Chen Wei<br />
02:14 His interest in voice AI technology<br />
03:17 Simultaneous translation demo in Chinese, English and Spanish<br />
04:56 The job of the Voice Interaction Technology Centre<br />
04:49 The technology breakthroughs of the translator<br />
06:09 The technology challenges of speech recognition in 42 languages<br />
12:44  How does the Sogou input method work<br />
15:10 Explain the meaning of “Zhiyin” in Chinese<br />
15:39 The reason that Sogou creates a new system Zhiyin<br />
16:40 Realize AI technology in different Sogou products and develop Zhiyin system for different partners<br />
18:24 Why Sogou produces a translation hardware device<br />
19:37 Other interfaces for translation except for the voice<br />
21:21 Future projects, such as lip recognition and virtual anchor<br />
24:07 Potential partnerships<br />
24:41 The gap between the industry and the universities<br />
25:22 How to contact Chen Wei</p>
<p>Feel free to leave a comment and start a conversation with us! If you have an ideal guest whom you would like to listen to, please let us know and we'll do our best to realize it!</p>
<p>Many thanks to our host Oscar Ramos and guest Chen Wei, editor David and Geep, producer Eva Shi, organizer Chinaccelerator and sponsor People Squared. Be sure to check out our website www.chinaccelerator.com</p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Thu, 18 Oct 2018 03:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Chinaccelerator)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The system of human perceptions is multi-faceted and voice is one of the perceptions that people pay the most attention to in Artificial Intelligence areas. Sogou established a speech recognition team in 2012 to explore technologies such as intelligent voice and machine translation. Now it is obviously a leader in the Chinese voice technology field.</p>
<p>In this episode, we’ve invited Chen Wei, the Chief Scientist of Sogou Voice Interaction Technology Centre, to introduce the technological breakthroughs in speech recognition, machine translation and speech synthesis behind Sogou translation products.</p>
<p>Chen Wei and his team also developed the Zhiyin OS system which is a system with multi-modal perception capabilities including speech recognition, handwriting recognition and lip-reading ability. The edge of this technology also extends to areas such as hardware and visual identification.</p>
<p>Perks for our listeners: You can find a promotion code to get free tickets for <strong>NewCo Shanghai 2018</strong> in this episode. Limited tickets and first come, first serve. https://chinaccelerator.com/newco-shanghai-2018/</p>
<p>Show notes:<br />
01:23 Introduce Chen Wei<br />
02:14 His interest in voice AI technology<br />
03:17 Simultaneous translation demo in Chinese, English and Spanish<br />
04:56 The job of the Voice Interaction Technology Centre<br />
04:49 The technology breakthroughs of the translator<br />
06:09 The technology challenges of speech recognition in 42 languages<br />
12:44  How does the Sogou input method work<br />
15:10 Explain the meaning of “Zhiyin” in Chinese<br />
15:39 The reason that Sogou creates a new system Zhiyin<br />
16:40 Realize AI technology in different Sogou products and develop Zhiyin system for different partners<br />
18:24 Why Sogou produces a translation hardware device<br />
19:37 Other interfaces for translation except for the voice<br />
21:21 Future projects, such as lip recognition and virtual anchor<br />
24:07 Potential partnerships<br />
24:41 The gap between the industry and the universities<br />
25:22 How to contact Chen Wei</p>
<p>Feel free to leave a comment and start a conversation with us! If you have an ideal guest whom you would like to listen to, please let us know and we'll do our best to realize it!</p>
<p>Many thanks to our host Oscar Ramos and guest Chen Wei, editor David and Geep, producer Eva Shi, organizer Chinaccelerator and sponsor People Squared. Be sure to check out our website www.chinaccelerator.com</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>The Breakthroughs of Voice AI Technologies with Chen Wei, Senior Director and Chief Scientist of Sogou Voice Interaction Technology Centre</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Chinaccelerator</itunes:author>
      <itunes:image href="https://image.simplecastcdn.com/images/a0e035/a0e0352f-fcbe-4ea1-813c-f1a09496ed52/d0e8c1e0-a5e5-42c1-a4dd-1936b42e652d/3000x3000/1539829916artwork.jpg?aid=rss_feed"/>
      <itunes:duration>00:27:46</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>The system of human perceptions is multi-faceted and voice is one of the perceptions that people pay the most attention to in Artificial Intelligence areas. Sogou established a speech recognition team in 2012 to explore technologies such as intelligent voice and machine translation. Now it is obviously a leader in the Chinese voice technology field. 

In this episode, we’ve invited Chen Wei, the Chief Scientist of Sogou Voice Interaction Technology Centre, to introduce the technological breakthroughs in speech recognition, machine translation and speech synthesis behind Sogou translation products.

Chen Wei and his team also developed the Zhiyin OS system which is a system with multi-modal perception capabilities including speech recognition, handwriting recognition and lip reading ability. The edge of this technology also extends to areas such as hardware and visual identification.

Perks for our listeners: You can find a promotion code to get free tickets for NewCo Shanghai 2018 in this episode. Limited tickets and first come, first serve.</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>The system of human perceptions is multi-faceted and voice is one of the perceptions that people pay the most attention to in Artificial Intelligence areas. Sogou established a speech recognition team in 2012 to explore technologies such as intelligent voice and machine translation. Now it is obviously a leader in the Chinese voice technology field. 

In this episode, we’ve invited Chen Wei, the Chief Scientist of Sogou Voice Interaction Technology Centre, to introduce the technological breakthroughs in speech recognition, machine translation and speech synthesis behind Sogou translation products.

Chen Wei and his team also developed the Zhiyin OS system which is a system with multi-modal perception capabilities including speech recognition, handwriting recognition and lip reading ability. The edge of this technology also extends to areas such as hardware and visual identification.

Perks for our listeners: You can find a promotion code to get free tickets for NewCo Shanghai 2018 in this episode. Limited tickets and first come, first serve.</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>accelerator, sogou, speech recognition, iot, artificial intelligence, vc, translation, human perceptions, lip reading  ability, hardware, machine translation, speech synthesis, voice interaction, voice, car device, visual identification</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:episode>80</itunes:episode>
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      <title>The rise of Pinduoduo and how it is disrupting Chinese e-commerce with Nicolas du Cray, Partner at Cathay Capital</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>You must have heard of the Chinese social commerce legend Pinduoduo, the fastest-growing mobile shopping platform featuring “team purchase” and social sharing function in China which became a $23 billion empire in under 4 years.</p>
<p>For this week’s episode, we invited Nicolas du Cray, an early investor of Pinduoduo and Partner at Cathay Capital - Innovation Fund to talk about Pinduoduo and Social Commerce in China. Nicolas shared how he decided to invest in this company, analyzed the strengths of Pinduoduo, and the challenges of internationalising the social commerce model. He also answered many questions collected from our listeners.</p>
<p>Show Notes:<br />
0:00 - 1:24 Welcome Back to China Startup Pulse<br />
1:26 - 2:00 Introducing Nicolas du Cray<br />
2:06 - 3:16 Du Cray’s experience in China<br />
3:16 - 3:49 Shift from Engineering to Venture Capital<br />
3:49 - 4:27 What is Cathay Capital?<br />
4:28 - 5:21 Importance of Venture Capital to Multi-National Corporations<br />
5:22 - 7:25 Cathay Capital’s Investments and Trends in Chinese Innovation<br />
7:26 - 8:28 Value of Foreign Venture Capital to Chinese Start Ups<br />
8:30 - 9:06 What is Pinduoduo?<br />
9:07 - 11:43 Social Commerce, Pinduoduo, and WeChat ecosystem<br />
11:44 - 12:46 Cathay Capital Innovation and their Investment in Pinduoduo<br />
12:47 - 15:22 Audience Question: History of Pinduoduo and Cathay Capital<br />
15:22 - 17:53 Audience Question: Pinduoduo’s Innovation in E-Commerce<br />
17:54 - 19:06 Growth Trigger of Pinduoduo<br />
19:07 - 20:14 Pinduoduo’s Business Model and Competition in China<br />
20:15 -  22:05 Audience Question: Challenges for Pinduoduo’s model going Abroad<br />
22:05 - 23:05 Future of WeChat’s platform<br />
23:06 - 23:35 Audience Question: Future of Pinduoduo<br />
23:36 - 24:27 Does Nicolas use Pinduoduo?<br />
24:31- 25:50 Signing Out and du Cray’s Contact Information</p>
<p>Feel free to leave a comment and start a conversation with us! If you have an ideal guest whom you would like to listen to, please let us know and we'll do our best to realize it!</p>
<p>Many thanks to our host Oscar Ramos and guest Nicolas du Cray, editor David and Geep, organizer Chinaccelerator and sponsor People Squared. Be sure to check out our website www.chinaccelerator.com</p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Wed, 10 Oct 2018 02:48:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Chinaccelerator)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>You must have heard of the Chinese social commerce legend Pinduoduo, the fastest-growing mobile shopping platform featuring “team purchase” and social sharing function in China which became a $23 billion empire in under 4 years.</p>
<p>For this week’s episode, we invited Nicolas du Cray, an early investor of Pinduoduo and Partner at Cathay Capital - Innovation Fund to talk about Pinduoduo and Social Commerce in China. Nicolas shared how he decided to invest in this company, analyzed the strengths of Pinduoduo, and the challenges of internationalising the social commerce model. He also answered many questions collected from our listeners.</p>
<p>Show Notes:<br />
0:00 - 1:24 Welcome Back to China Startup Pulse<br />
1:26 - 2:00 Introducing Nicolas du Cray<br />
2:06 - 3:16 Du Cray’s experience in China<br />
3:16 - 3:49 Shift from Engineering to Venture Capital<br />
3:49 - 4:27 What is Cathay Capital?<br />
4:28 - 5:21 Importance of Venture Capital to Multi-National Corporations<br />
5:22 - 7:25 Cathay Capital’s Investments and Trends in Chinese Innovation<br />
7:26 - 8:28 Value of Foreign Venture Capital to Chinese Start Ups<br />
8:30 - 9:06 What is Pinduoduo?<br />
9:07 - 11:43 Social Commerce, Pinduoduo, and WeChat ecosystem<br />
11:44 - 12:46 Cathay Capital Innovation and their Investment in Pinduoduo<br />
12:47 - 15:22 Audience Question: History of Pinduoduo and Cathay Capital<br />
15:22 - 17:53 Audience Question: Pinduoduo’s Innovation in E-Commerce<br />
17:54 - 19:06 Growth Trigger of Pinduoduo<br />
19:07 - 20:14 Pinduoduo’s Business Model and Competition in China<br />
20:15 -  22:05 Audience Question: Challenges for Pinduoduo’s model going Abroad<br />
22:05 - 23:05 Future of WeChat’s platform<br />
23:06 - 23:35 Audience Question: Future of Pinduoduo<br />
23:36 - 24:27 Does Nicolas use Pinduoduo?<br />
24:31- 25:50 Signing Out and du Cray’s Contact Information</p>
<p>Feel free to leave a comment and start a conversation with us! If you have an ideal guest whom you would like to listen to, please let us know and we'll do our best to realize it!</p>
<p>Many thanks to our host Oscar Ramos and guest Nicolas du Cray, editor David and Geep, organizer Chinaccelerator and sponsor People Squared. Be sure to check out our website www.chinaccelerator.com</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>The rise of Pinduoduo and how it is disrupting Chinese e-commerce with Nicolas du Cray, Partner at Cathay Capital</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Chinaccelerator</itunes:author>
      <itunes:image href="https://image.simplecastcdn.com/images/a0e035/a0e0352f-fcbe-4ea1-813c-f1a09496ed52/e5f3a1b9-abde-453a-86d7-d6d5b1c7258e/3000x3000/1539140305artwork.jpg?aid=rss_feed"/>
      <itunes:duration>00:25:51</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>You must have heard of the Chinese social commerce legend Pinduoduo, the fastest-growing mobile shopping platform featuring “team purchase” and social sharing function in China which became a $23 billion empire in under 4 years.

For this week’s episode, we invited Nicolas du Cray, an early investor of Pinduoduo and Partner at Cathay Capital - Innovation Fund to talk about Pinduoduo and Social Commerce in China. Nicolas shared how he decided to invest in this company, analyzed the strengths of Pinduoduo, and the challenges of internationalising the social commerce model. He also answered many questions collected from our listeners.</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>You must have heard of the Chinese social commerce legend Pinduoduo, the fastest-growing mobile shopping platform featuring “team purchase” and social sharing function in China which became a $23 billion empire in under 4 years.

For this week’s episode, we invited Nicolas du Cray, an early investor of Pinduoduo and Partner at Cathay Capital - Innovation Fund to talk about Pinduoduo and Social Commerce in China. Nicolas shared how he decided to invest in this company, analyzed the strengths of Pinduoduo, and the challenges of internationalising the social commerce model. He also answered many questions collected from our listeners.</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>nicolas du cray, cathay capital, pinduoduo, e-commerce, innovation</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:episode>79</itunes:episode>
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      <title>The Growth Story of An Emerging E-Commerce Startup with Lu Guo, Founder of Shopal</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>As an early pioneer in cross-border commerce, Lu Guo chose to leave a multinational company and jump into the jungles of entrepreneurship. She shared her belief behind building her startup Shopal which aims to help global brands to build a strong presence in China through a data-driven process. She also shared her early stage business life in an accelerator - Chinaccelerator. Here is a quote from her: “The scary piece is that you only believe in system”.</p>
<p>Shopal is a solution provider for online and offline retailers in China which has secured RMB200 million (US$29.17 million) in a series B+ round in September 2018. Chinaccelerator SOSV invested in Shopal as one of Batch 7 companies.</p>
<p>Show notes:<br />
01:06  Introduce Lu Guo<br />
02:00  First experience in cross-border commerce space<br />
03:37  What is Shopal and stories behind Shopal<br />
07:23  The concept of “TP”<br />
07:57  Lu’s motivation to leave the comfortable zone<br />
10:31  Differences between being an entrepreneur and working in corporates<br />
13:47  As a Vice President in Johnson&amp;Johnson<br />
16:30  What triggered Lu to jump into the jungle of entrepreneurship<br />
18:50  Change and opportunities in the commerce industry<br />
22:29  How Shopal helps global brands in China<br />
24:20  The biggest technology breakthrough for Shopal<br />
26:23  Data driven process<br />
27:23  The future of Shopal<br />
29:11  Business and life in Chinaccelerator<br />
31:00  Contact Shopal</p>
<p>Feel free to leave a comment and start a conversation with us! If you have an ideal guest whom you would like to listen to, please let us know and we'll do our best to realize it!</p>
<p>Many thanks to our host Oscar Ramos and guest Lu Guo, editor David and Geep, organizer Chinaccelerator and sponsor People Squared. Be sure to check out our website www.chinaccelerator.com</p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Wed, 26 Sep 2018 02:47:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Chinaccelerator)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>As an early pioneer in cross-border commerce, Lu Guo chose to leave a multinational company and jump into the jungles of entrepreneurship. She shared her belief behind building her startup Shopal which aims to help global brands to build a strong presence in China through a data-driven process. She also shared her early stage business life in an accelerator - Chinaccelerator. Here is a quote from her: “The scary piece is that you only believe in system”.</p>
<p>Shopal is a solution provider for online and offline retailers in China which has secured RMB200 million (US$29.17 million) in a series B+ round in September 2018. Chinaccelerator SOSV invested in Shopal as one of Batch 7 companies.</p>
<p>Show notes:<br />
01:06  Introduce Lu Guo<br />
02:00  First experience in cross-border commerce space<br />
03:37  What is Shopal and stories behind Shopal<br />
07:23  The concept of “TP”<br />
07:57  Lu’s motivation to leave the comfortable zone<br />
10:31  Differences between being an entrepreneur and working in corporates<br />
13:47  As a Vice President in Johnson&amp;Johnson<br />
16:30  What triggered Lu to jump into the jungle of entrepreneurship<br />
18:50  Change and opportunities in the commerce industry<br />
22:29  How Shopal helps global brands in China<br />
24:20  The biggest technology breakthrough for Shopal<br />
26:23  Data driven process<br />
27:23  The future of Shopal<br />
29:11  Business and life in Chinaccelerator<br />
31:00  Contact Shopal</p>
<p>Feel free to leave a comment and start a conversation with us! If you have an ideal guest whom you would like to listen to, please let us know and we'll do our best to realize it!</p>
<p>Many thanks to our host Oscar Ramos and guest Lu Guo, editor David and Geep, organizer Chinaccelerator and sponsor People Squared. Be sure to check out our website www.chinaccelerator.com</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>The Growth Story of An Emerging E-Commerce Startup with Lu Guo, Founder of Shopal</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Chinaccelerator</itunes:author>
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      <itunes:duration>00:32:38</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>As an early pioneer in cross-border commerce, Lu Guo chose to leave a multinational company and jump into the jungles of entrepreneurship. She shared her belief behind building her startup Shopal which aims to help global brands to build a strong presence in China through a data-driven process. She also shared her early stage business life in an accelerator - Chinaccelerator. Here is a quote from her: “The scary piece is that you only believe in system”.

Shopal is a solution provider for online and offline retailers in China which has secured RMB200 million (US$29.17 million) in a series B+ round in September 2018. Chinaccelerator SOSV invested in Shopal as one of Batch 7 companies.</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>As an early pioneer in cross-border commerce, Lu Guo chose to leave a multinational company and jump into the jungles of entrepreneurship. She shared her belief behind building her startup Shopal which aims to help global brands to build a strong presence in China through a data-driven process. She also shared her early stage business life in an accelerator - Chinaccelerator. Here is a quote from her: “The scary piece is that you only believe in system”.

Shopal is a solution provider for online and offline retailers in China which has secured RMB200 million (US$29.17 million) in a series B+ round in September 2018. Chinaccelerator SOSV invested in Shopal as one of Batch 7 companies.</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>accelerator, commerce, brand, online, e-commerce, chinaccelerator, offline, technology, sosv, cross-border, startup, venture capital, entrepreneur, podcast, promotion, multinational</itunes:keywords>
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      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:episode>78</itunes:episode>
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      <title>The Challenges of Chinese Companies Going Global, with Omid Scheybani,  Former Global Head of Partnerships and Business Development at ofo</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>Many opportunities and challenges are found in the startup world under the impact of globalization. Today, we have invited Omid Scheybani, former Global Head of Partnerships and Business Development at ofo to share the challenges of Chinese business going international from the perspective of management, product and brand, and also opportunities for overseas talents working in China.</p>
<p>Ofo is a leading bike sharing company in China, which was valued at up to $2 billion and had over 62.7 million MAU (monthly active users) in 2017.</p>
<p>Show Notes:<br />
0:00 Welcome Back and Introduction<br />
1:50 Introducing Omid Scheybani<br />
2:50 How Omid came to China and why he stayed<br />
4:45 Chinese perceptions on Global Markets<br />
8:15 Chinese Technology Going Global and shift in Chinese exports<br />
12:27 Diversity in Chinese Business and need for International Talent<br />
14:57 Omid’s Advice on working for Chinese companies<br />
17:55 Challenges in Internationalization for Chinese Businesses<br />
19:25 Adapting to Chinese Business Norms and Treatment of International Talent<br />
20:25 Perspectives of Chinese products in International Markets<br />
26:34 Lightning Round Questions<br />
29:19 Spread of Chinese Products to Foreign Markets<br />
33:31 Omid’s Contact Information<br />
Omid's website: omidscheybani.com</p>
<p>Feel free to leave a comment and start a conversation with us! If you have an ideal guest whom you would like to listen to, please let us know and we'll do our best to realize it!</p>
<p>Many thanks to our host Oscar Ramos, Ryan Shuken, and guest Omid Scheybani, editor David and Geep, organizer Chinaccelerator and sponsor People Squared. Be sure to check out our website www.chinaccelerator.com</p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Wed, 19 Sep 2018 04:07:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Chinaccelerator)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Many opportunities and challenges are found in the startup world under the impact of globalization. Today, we have invited Omid Scheybani, former Global Head of Partnerships and Business Development at ofo to share the challenges of Chinese business going international from the perspective of management, product and brand, and also opportunities for overseas talents working in China.</p>
<p>Ofo is a leading bike sharing company in China, which was valued at up to $2 billion and had over 62.7 million MAU (monthly active users) in 2017.</p>
<p>Show Notes:<br />
0:00 Welcome Back and Introduction<br />
1:50 Introducing Omid Scheybani<br />
2:50 How Omid came to China and why he stayed<br />
4:45 Chinese perceptions on Global Markets<br />
8:15 Chinese Technology Going Global and shift in Chinese exports<br />
12:27 Diversity in Chinese Business and need for International Talent<br />
14:57 Omid’s Advice on working for Chinese companies<br />
17:55 Challenges in Internationalization for Chinese Businesses<br />
19:25 Adapting to Chinese Business Norms and Treatment of International Talent<br />
20:25 Perspectives of Chinese products in International Markets<br />
26:34 Lightning Round Questions<br />
29:19 Spread of Chinese Products to Foreign Markets<br />
33:31 Omid’s Contact Information<br />
Omid's website: omidscheybani.com</p>
<p>Feel free to leave a comment and start a conversation with us! If you have an ideal guest whom you would like to listen to, please let us know and we'll do our best to realize it!</p>
<p>Many thanks to our host Oscar Ramos, Ryan Shuken, and guest Omid Scheybani, editor David and Geep, organizer Chinaccelerator and sponsor People Squared. Be sure to check out our website www.chinaccelerator.com</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>The Challenges of Chinese Companies Going Global, with Omid Scheybani,  Former Global Head of Partnerships and Business Development at ofo</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Chinaccelerator</itunes:author>
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      <itunes:duration>00:35:14</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>Many opportunities and challenges are found in the startup world under the impact of globalization. Today, we have invited Omid Scheybani, former Global Head of Partnerships and Business Development at ofo to share the challenges of Chinese business going international from the perspective of management, product and brand, and also opportunities for overseas talents working in China.

Ofo is a leading bike sharing company in China, which was valued at up to $2 billion and had over 62.7 million MAU (monthly active users) in 2017.</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>Many opportunities and challenges are found in the startup world under the impact of globalization. Today, we have invited Omid Scheybani, former Global Head of Partnerships and Business Development at ofo to share the challenges of Chinese business going international from the perspective of management, product and brand, and also opportunities for overseas talents working in China.

Ofo is a leading bike sharing company in China, which was valued at up to $2 billion and had over 62.7 million MAU (monthly active users) in 2017.</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>accelerator, partnership, china, go global, internationalization, bikesharing, chinaccelerator, sosv, cross-border, venture capital, business development, globalization, investment, talent, ofo</itunes:keywords>
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      <title>The Importance of Mindfulness and how it can improve your business, with Brandon Mehrgut, founder of Shanghai Mindfulness</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>Mindfulness as a tool for businesses has been growing in the West and is now starting to come to China. Brandon Mehrgut, of Shanghai Mindfulness, explains what mindfulness meditation is and how beneficial it is to the Chinese start-up culture and community. Practicing mindfulness can help improve attention, focus, and stress. It has also been practiced by important people and businesses, such as Steve Jobs and DiDi. Join us, and listen to how mindfulness can improve your business.</p>
<p>Shanghai Mindfulness is an English-speaking mindfulness organization. It was founded by Brandon Mehrgut and has become China’s largest mindfulness community. Shanghai Mindfulness helps overworked, stressed out people find peace and balance.</p>
<p>Show Notes:<br />
0:04 Introducing Brandon<br />
1:40 Explaining Mindfulness Meditation<br />
2:36 Why is Shanghai interested in mindfulness?<br />
3:09 Mindfulness application to Entrepreneurs<br />
4:18 How can entrepreneurs practice mindfulness?<br />
5:12 Reasons for entrepreneurs to seek mindfulness training<br />
7:00 Silicon Valley-style mindfulness and China<br />
9:37 How do hard-working, Chinese start-ups adapt mindfulness?<br />
14:07 Who are the pioneers promoting mindfulness?<br />
15:19 Mindfulness Arrives to China<br />
17:40 Shanghai Mindfulness’s work with DiDi and other Chinese Companies<br />
19:38 How does management implement mindfulness?<br />
22:25 What is the data behind mindfulness?<br />
25:55 How to contact Brandon Mehrgut</p>
<p>Feel free to leave a comment and start a conversation with us! If you have an ideal guest whom you would like to listen to, please let us know and we'll do our best to realize it!</p>
<p>Many thanks to our host Oscar Ramos, guest Brandon Mehrgut, editor David and Geep, organizer Chinaccelerator and sponsor People Squared. Be sure to check out our website www.chinaccelerator.com</p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Thu, 13 Sep 2018 02:25:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Chinaccelerator)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Mindfulness as a tool for businesses has been growing in the West and is now starting to come to China. Brandon Mehrgut, of Shanghai Mindfulness, explains what mindfulness meditation is and how beneficial it is to the Chinese start-up culture and community. Practicing mindfulness can help improve attention, focus, and stress. It has also been practiced by important people and businesses, such as Steve Jobs and DiDi. Join us, and listen to how mindfulness can improve your business.</p>
<p>Shanghai Mindfulness is an English-speaking mindfulness organization. It was founded by Brandon Mehrgut and has become China’s largest mindfulness community. Shanghai Mindfulness helps overworked, stressed out people find peace and balance.</p>
<p>Show Notes:<br />
0:04 Introducing Brandon<br />
1:40 Explaining Mindfulness Meditation<br />
2:36 Why is Shanghai interested in mindfulness?<br />
3:09 Mindfulness application to Entrepreneurs<br />
4:18 How can entrepreneurs practice mindfulness?<br />
5:12 Reasons for entrepreneurs to seek mindfulness training<br />
7:00 Silicon Valley-style mindfulness and China<br />
9:37 How do hard-working, Chinese start-ups adapt mindfulness?<br />
14:07 Who are the pioneers promoting mindfulness?<br />
15:19 Mindfulness Arrives to China<br />
17:40 Shanghai Mindfulness’s work with DiDi and other Chinese Companies<br />
19:38 How does management implement mindfulness?<br />
22:25 What is the data behind mindfulness?<br />
25:55 How to contact Brandon Mehrgut</p>
<p>Feel free to leave a comment and start a conversation with us! If you have an ideal guest whom you would like to listen to, please let us know and we'll do our best to realize it!</p>
<p>Many thanks to our host Oscar Ramos, guest Brandon Mehrgut, editor David and Geep, organizer Chinaccelerator and sponsor People Squared. Be sure to check out our website www.chinaccelerator.com</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>The Importance of Mindfulness and how it can improve your business, with Brandon Mehrgut, founder of Shanghai Mindfulness</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Chinaccelerator</itunes:author>
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      <itunes:summary>Mindfulness as a tool for businesses has been growing in the West and is now starting to come to China. Brandon Mehrgut, of Shanghai Mindfulness, explains what mindfulness meditation is and how beneficial it is to the Chinese start-up culture and community. Practicing mindfulness can help improve attention, focus, and stress. It has also been practiced by important people and businesses, such as Steve Jobs and DiDi. Join us, and listen to how mindfulness can improve your business.
Shanghai Mindfulness is an English-speaking mindfulness organization. It was founded by Brandon Mehrgut and has become China’s largest mindfulness community. Shanghai Mindfulness helps overworked, stressed out people find peace and balance.</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>Mindfulness as a tool for businesses has been growing in the West and is now starting to come to China. Brandon Mehrgut, of Shanghai Mindfulness, explains what mindfulness meditation is and how beneficial it is to the Chinese start-up culture and community. Practicing mindfulness can help improve attention, focus, and stress. It has also been practiced by important people and businesses, such as Steve Jobs and DiDi. Join us, and listen to how mindfulness can improve your business.
Shanghai Mindfulness is an English-speaking mindfulness organization. It was founded by Brandon Mehrgut and has become China’s largest mindfulness community. Shanghai Mindfulness helps overworked, stressed out people find peace and balance.</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>brandon mehrgut, meditation, oscar ramos, health, mindfulness, stress, entrepreneur, shanghai, focus</itunes:keywords>
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      <title>The Initiatives of Business Sustainability in China with Richard Brubaker, Founder of Collective Responsibility and HandsOn China</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>Chinese companies are exploring many initiatives to achieve business sustainability, including Ele.me‘s RELAB and Meituan’s emphasis on environmental protection. Ofo, Mobike and many Chinese bike sharing companies ever generated a large amount of attention and discussion on whether they are leading a sustainable lifestyle or just creating  e-waste mountains. You can see many opportunities in different industries in China to experiment and implement your idea of sustainability. Today, we have Richard Brubaker, expert in business sustainability, to share his perspectives.</p>
<p>Collective Responsibility is a Shanghai-based firm to design and develop corporate responsibility, sustainability, and leadership strategy for corporates, nonprofit and academic institutions.</p>
<p>Show notes:<br />
01:20 Introduce Richard<br />
02:06 What makes Shanghai special<br />
03:44 Why sustainability is a very important thing in China<br />
06:19 How sustainability in China is relevant with the rest of the world<br />
10:44 Is sustainability leading the born of China innovation<br />
13:05 Chinese consumers are amazing early adopters. Is Shanghai a perfect lab for sustainability?<br />
15:13 Is the booming E-Commerce industry in China sustainable?<br />
18:16 How do you see that ele.me launched ele.me Lab because of the impact of sustainability<br />
22:05 Are these bike sharing companies truly leading the sustainable lifestyle?<br />
25:00 Mobike’s GPS functionality helps improve the sustainability<br />
28:08 How consumers think about sustainability<br />
34:14 How can a founder start thinking about sustainability in the user experience and core of the company<br />
38:00 In the space of sustainability, which industries in China are more friendly for foreigners<br />
40:20 How to contact Richard</p>
<p>Feel free to leave a comment and start a conversation with us! If you have an ideal guest whom you would like to listen to, please let us know and we'll do our best to realize it!</p>
<p>Many thanks to our host Oscar Ramos, guest Richard Brubaker, editor David and Geep, organizer Chinaccelerator and sponsor People Squared. Be sure to check out our website www.chinaccelerator.com</p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Wed, 5 Sep 2018 02:55:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Chinaccelerator)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Chinese companies are exploring many initiatives to achieve business sustainability, including Ele.me‘s RELAB and Meituan’s emphasis on environmental protection. Ofo, Mobike and many Chinese bike sharing companies ever generated a large amount of attention and discussion on whether they are leading a sustainable lifestyle or just creating  e-waste mountains. You can see many opportunities in different industries in China to experiment and implement your idea of sustainability. Today, we have Richard Brubaker, expert in business sustainability, to share his perspectives.</p>
<p>Collective Responsibility is a Shanghai-based firm to design and develop corporate responsibility, sustainability, and leadership strategy for corporates, nonprofit and academic institutions.</p>
<p>Show notes:<br />
01:20 Introduce Richard<br />
02:06 What makes Shanghai special<br />
03:44 Why sustainability is a very important thing in China<br />
06:19 How sustainability in China is relevant with the rest of the world<br />
10:44 Is sustainability leading the born of China innovation<br />
13:05 Chinese consumers are amazing early adopters. Is Shanghai a perfect lab for sustainability?<br />
15:13 Is the booming E-Commerce industry in China sustainable?<br />
18:16 How do you see that ele.me launched ele.me Lab because of the impact of sustainability<br />
22:05 Are these bike sharing companies truly leading the sustainable lifestyle?<br />
25:00 Mobike’s GPS functionality helps improve the sustainability<br />
28:08 How consumers think about sustainability<br />
34:14 How can a founder start thinking about sustainability in the user experience and core of the company<br />
38:00 In the space of sustainability, which industries in China are more friendly for foreigners<br />
40:20 How to contact Richard</p>
<p>Feel free to leave a comment and start a conversation with us! If you have an ideal guest whom you would like to listen to, please let us know and we'll do our best to realize it!</p>
<p>Many thanks to our host Oscar Ramos, guest Richard Brubaker, editor David and Geep, organizer Chinaccelerator and sponsor People Squared. Be sure to check out our website www.chinaccelerator.com</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>The Initiatives of Business Sustainability in China with Richard Brubaker, Founder of Collective Responsibility and HandsOn China</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Chinaccelerator</itunes:author>
      <itunes:image href="https://image.simplecastcdn.com/images/a0e035/a0e0352f-fcbe-4ea1-813c-f1a09496ed52/26872a96-3856-4dd8-b08d-e14d425dc485/3000x3000/1536116576artwork.jpg?aid=rss_feed"/>
      <itunes:duration>00:42:10</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>Chinese companies are exploring many initiatives to achieve business sustainability, including Ele.me&apos;s RELAB and Meituan&apos;s emphasis on environment protection. Ofo, Mobike and many Chinese bike sharing companies ever generated a large amount of attention and discussion on whether they are leading a sustainable lifestyle or just creating  e-waste mountains. You can see many opportunities in different industries in China to experiment and implement your idea of sustainability. Today, we have Richard Brubaker, expert in business sustainability, to share his perspectives.

Collective Responsibility is a Shanghai-based firm to design and develop corporate responsibility, sustainability, and leadership strategy for corporates, nonprofit and academic institutions.</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>Chinese companies are exploring many initiatives to achieve business sustainability, including Ele.me&apos;s RELAB and Meituan&apos;s emphasis on environment protection. Ofo, Mobike and many Chinese bike sharing companies ever generated a large amount of attention and discussion on whether they are leading a sustainable lifestyle or just creating  e-waste mountains. You can see many opportunities in different industries in China to experiment and implement your idea of sustainability. Today, we have Richard Brubaker, expert in business sustainability, to share his perspectives.

Collective Responsibility is a Shanghai-based firm to design and develop corporate responsibility, sustainability, and leadership strategy for corporates, nonprofit and academic institutions.</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>accelerator, vc, china, ele.me, meituan, chinaccelerator, consumers, technology, product, venture capital, innovation, pollution, bike, business sustainability, mobike, ofo</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:episode>75</itunes:episode>
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      <title>Embrace the New Retail Wave in China with Stephane Monsallier, Founder of Shops of the Future</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>The buzzword “New Retail” has swept through China for over one year. What challenges does it bring to the traditional retail industry and how can international brands cope with the new retail concept? Today, we have invited Stephane Monsallier, founder of shops for the future. He shared with us his views on the very exciting concept that was born in China and is now rapidly spreading to the rest of the world.</p>
<p>Shops of the Future helps international brands navigate the new innovation in the retail space in china.</p>
<p>Show Notes:</p>
<p>1:27 Introduction<br />
3:13 How things have changed in China<br />
4:30 Changes in retail industry and how mobile payments are disrupting the industry in China<br />
7:08 International brands coming to learn in China<br />
8:56 Relevancy for all brands or brands that have presence in China<br />
10:00 China is not an easy market<br />
11:50 Hema experience in China<br />
13:17 New retail wave of startups<br />
15:39 Not too much about technology, but mindset change is key<br />
17:00 Embrace the wave of new retail<br />
19:10 The China speed<br />
21:31 Importance of business thinking<br />
22:45 Traditional Chinese retailers<br />
24:49 Convenience stores<br />
26:41 New retail changes consumer habits<br />
28:28 How to reach out to Stephane Monsallier</p>
<p>Feel free to leave a comment and start a conversation with us! If you have an ideal guest whom you would like to listen to, please let us know and we'll do our best to realize it!</p>
<p>Many thanks to our host Oscar Ramos, guest Stephane Monsallier, editor David and Geep, organizer Chinaccelerator and sponsor People Squared. Be sure to check out our website www.chinaccelerator.com</p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Wed, 29 Aug 2018 09:02:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Chinaccelerator)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The buzzword “New Retail” has swept through China for over one year. What challenges does it bring to the traditional retail industry and how can international brands cope with the new retail concept? Today, we have invited Stephane Monsallier, founder of shops for the future. He shared with us his views on the very exciting concept that was born in China and is now rapidly spreading to the rest of the world.</p>
<p>Shops of the Future helps international brands navigate the new innovation in the retail space in china.</p>
<p>Show Notes:</p>
<p>1:27 Introduction<br />
3:13 How things have changed in China<br />
4:30 Changes in retail industry and how mobile payments are disrupting the industry in China<br />
7:08 International brands coming to learn in China<br />
8:56 Relevancy for all brands or brands that have presence in China<br />
10:00 China is not an easy market<br />
11:50 Hema experience in China<br />
13:17 New retail wave of startups<br />
15:39 Not too much about technology, but mindset change is key<br />
17:00 Embrace the wave of new retail<br />
19:10 The China speed<br />
21:31 Importance of business thinking<br />
22:45 Traditional Chinese retailers<br />
24:49 Convenience stores<br />
26:41 New retail changes consumer habits<br />
28:28 How to reach out to Stephane Monsallier</p>
<p>Feel free to leave a comment and start a conversation with us! If you have an ideal guest whom you would like to listen to, please let us know and we'll do our best to realize it!</p>
<p>Many thanks to our host Oscar Ramos, guest Stephane Monsallier, editor David and Geep, organizer Chinaccelerator and sponsor People Squared. Be sure to check out our website www.chinaccelerator.com</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>Embrace the New Retail Wave in China with Stephane Monsallier, Founder of Shops of the Future</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Chinaccelerator</itunes:author>
      <itunes:image href="https://image.simplecastcdn.com/images/a0e035/a0e0352f-fcbe-4ea1-813c-f1a09496ed52/91199cf7-dc0c-45ec-a8c7-17e9523cfee1/3000x3000/1535533601artwork.jpg?aid=rss_feed"/>
      <itunes:duration>00:29:21</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>The buzzword “New Retail” has swept through China for over one year. What challenges does it bring to the traditional retail industry and how can international brands cope with the new retail concept? Today, we have invited Stephane Monsallier, founder of shops for the future. He shared with us his views on the very exciting concept that was born in China and is now rapidly spreading to the rest of the world.

Shops of the Future helps international brands navigate the new innovation in the retail space in china.  </itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>The buzzword “New Retail” has swept through China for over one year. What challenges does it bring to the traditional retail industry and how can international brands cope with the new retail concept? Today, we have invited Stephane Monsallier, founder of shops for the future. He shared with us his views on the very exciting concept that was born in China and is now rapidly spreading to the rest of the world.

Shops of the Future helps international brands navigate the new innovation in the retail space in china.  </itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>accelerator, consumer, retail, brand, payment, china, business thinking, chinaccelerator, technology, new retail, sosv, venture capital, shops, hema</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
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      <itunes:episode>74</itunes:episode>
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      <title>The Myth of An Early Exit with Bruno Bensaid, Investor and Co-Founder of Shanghaivest</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>Many founders believe an IPO is the only option for an exit. Today, we sit down with Bruno Bensaid, co-founder of Shanghaivest, mentor at Chinaccelerator, and long-term player in China’s startup ecosystem to share his insights on early exits and acquisitions by corporate bodies. Here’s a short quote: “All options should be on the table from very early on”.</p>
<p>Shanghaivest helps build and execute investment,  expansion, fundraising and exit strategies for companies in China and Overseas.</p>
<p>Show Notes:</p>
<p>01:10  Introduce Bruno</p>
<p>01:52 How Bruno made transitions from engineering to business</p>
<p>03:48 Is go public the only ultimate goal?</p>
<p>8:19 All options should be on the table from the very early on</p>
<p>10:40 How’s the acquisition market in China and how it involves</p>
<p>11:55 More transactions in gaming and healthcare industry</p>
<p>12:33 What are those Chinese buyers? What acquisitions are they looking for?</p>
<p>17:35 Local corporate VCs are more active than Google  - they have a large range of investment possibilities</p>
<p>19:13 The early exit doesn’t mean that founders get less return. Do you see early exit is good for founders in China?</p>
<p>22:30 You need to think about your exit early.<br />
Check out the article: “Why founders need to prepare for exits”  https://medium.com/sosv-accelerator-vc/why-founders-need-to-prepare-for-exits-97766d865410</p>
<p>25:01 Example of App Annie</p>
<p>29:03 Why does it make sense to consider an early acquisition in China and what’s the criteria for corporates to decide on acquisition</p>
<p>36:06 Contact Bruno</p>
<p>Feel free to leave a comment and start a conversation with us! If you have an ideal guest whom you would like to listen to, please let us know and we'll do our best to realize it!</p>
<p>Many thanks to our host Oscar Ramos, guest Bruno Bensaid, editor David and Geep, organizer Chinaccelerator and sponsor People Squared. Be sure to check out our website www.chinaccelerator.com</p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Wed, 22 Aug 2018 03:27:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Chinaccelerator)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Many founders believe an IPO is the only option for an exit. Today, we sit down with Bruno Bensaid, co-founder of Shanghaivest, mentor at Chinaccelerator, and long-term player in China’s startup ecosystem to share his insights on early exits and acquisitions by corporate bodies. Here’s a short quote: “All options should be on the table from very early on”.</p>
<p>Shanghaivest helps build and execute investment,  expansion, fundraising and exit strategies for companies in China and Overseas.</p>
<p>Show Notes:</p>
<p>01:10  Introduce Bruno</p>
<p>01:52 How Bruno made transitions from engineering to business</p>
<p>03:48 Is go public the only ultimate goal?</p>
<p>8:19 All options should be on the table from the very early on</p>
<p>10:40 How’s the acquisition market in China and how it involves</p>
<p>11:55 More transactions in gaming and healthcare industry</p>
<p>12:33 What are those Chinese buyers? What acquisitions are they looking for?</p>
<p>17:35 Local corporate VCs are more active than Google  - they have a large range of investment possibilities</p>
<p>19:13 The early exit doesn’t mean that founders get less return. Do you see early exit is good for founders in China?</p>
<p>22:30 You need to think about your exit early.<br />
Check out the article: “Why founders need to prepare for exits”  https://medium.com/sosv-accelerator-vc/why-founders-need-to-prepare-for-exits-97766d865410</p>
<p>25:01 Example of App Annie</p>
<p>29:03 Why does it make sense to consider an early acquisition in China and what’s the criteria for corporates to decide on acquisition</p>
<p>36:06 Contact Bruno</p>
<p>Feel free to leave a comment and start a conversation with us! If you have an ideal guest whom you would like to listen to, please let us know and we'll do our best to realize it!</p>
<p>Many thanks to our host Oscar Ramos, guest Bruno Bensaid, editor David and Geep, organizer Chinaccelerator and sponsor People Squared. Be sure to check out our website www.chinaccelerator.com</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>The Myth of An Early Exit with Bruno Bensaid, Investor and Co-Founder of Shanghaivest</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Chinaccelerator</itunes:author>
      <itunes:image href="https://image.simplecastcdn.com/images/a0e035/a0e0352f-fcbe-4ea1-813c-f1a09496ed52/1a8d4b7d-aa2a-441a-97ae-777ebfa26619/3000x3000/1534908383artwork.jpg?aid=rss_feed"/>
      <itunes:duration>00:38:14</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>Many founders believe an IPO is the only option for an exit. Today, we sit down with Bruno Bensaid, co-founder of Shanghaivest, mentor at Chinaccelerator, and long-term player in China’s startup ecosystem to share his insights on early exits and acquisitions by corporate bodies. Here’s a short quote: “All options should be on the table from very early on”.</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>Many founders believe an IPO is the only option for an exit. Today, we sit down with Bruno Bensaid, co-founder of Shanghaivest, mentor at Chinaccelerator, and long-term player in China’s startup ecosystem to share his insights on early exits and acquisitions by corporate bodies. Here’s a short quote: “All options should be on the table from very early on”.</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>accelerator, china startup pulse, go public, early exit, vc, fundraising, founders, exit, chinaccelerator, sosv, venture capital, ipo, startups, entrepreneurs, csp</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:episode>73</itunes:episode>
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      <title>Breaking Down Barriers and Establishing a Global Startup Community, with Chen Wang, CEO at Slush China</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>Slush is one of the fastest growing events and communities for startups globally, bringing together both local and international companies to help inspire and support youth to pursue their dreams of entrepreneurship.</p>
<p>Today, we welcome Chen Wang, the person who helped the event break into the Chinese market, starting with Beijing in 2015. With Slush Shanghai coming up next month (September 7 to 8), Chen talks to us about the challenges of entrepreneurship, including maintaining good relationships with the government, protecting intellectual property and other essential tips to prospering in China.</p>
<p>Listen to the end for a special surprise for our dedicated listeners, on behalf of Slush China!</p>
<p>Show Notes:<br />
01:30 Introduce Chen<br />
02:23 What’s so special about Slush<br />
06:15 Finding support and security in Finland<br />
08:40 Global Community in Shanghai<br />
11:05 The Chinese roots of Slush<br />
13:03 The importance of government relations in China<br />
15:31 Advice to organizations coming to China<br />
18:58 Intellectual property concerns<br />
19:51 The Chinese presence at Slush<br />
24:25 Contact Info</p>
<p>Feel free to leave a comment and start a conversation with us! If you have an ideal guest whom you would like to listen to, please let us know and we'll do our best to realize it!</p>
<p>Many thanks to our host Oscar Ramos, guest Chen Wang, editor David and Geep, organizer Chinaccelerator and sponsor People Squared. Be sure to check out our website www.chinaccelerator.com</p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Fri, 17 Aug 2018 03:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Chinaccelerator)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Slush is one of the fastest growing events and communities for startups globally, bringing together both local and international companies to help inspire and support youth to pursue their dreams of entrepreneurship.</p>
<p>Today, we welcome Chen Wang, the person who helped the event break into the Chinese market, starting with Beijing in 2015. With Slush Shanghai coming up next month (September 7 to 8), Chen talks to us about the challenges of entrepreneurship, including maintaining good relationships with the government, protecting intellectual property and other essential tips to prospering in China.</p>
<p>Listen to the end for a special surprise for our dedicated listeners, on behalf of Slush China!</p>
<p>Show Notes:<br />
01:30 Introduce Chen<br />
02:23 What’s so special about Slush<br />
06:15 Finding support and security in Finland<br />
08:40 Global Community in Shanghai<br />
11:05 The Chinese roots of Slush<br />
13:03 The importance of government relations in China<br />
15:31 Advice to organizations coming to China<br />
18:58 Intellectual property concerns<br />
19:51 The Chinese presence at Slush<br />
24:25 Contact Info</p>
<p>Feel free to leave a comment and start a conversation with us! If you have an ideal guest whom you would like to listen to, please let us know and we'll do our best to realize it!</p>
<p>Many thanks to our host Oscar Ramos, guest Chen Wang, editor David and Geep, organizer Chinaccelerator and sponsor People Squared. Be sure to check out our website www.chinaccelerator.com</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>Breaking Down Barriers and Establishing a Global Startup Community, with Chen Wang, CEO at Slush China</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Chinaccelerator</itunes:author>
      <itunes:image href="https://image.simplecastcdn.com/images/a0e035/a0e0352f-fcbe-4ea1-813c-f1a09496ed52/77911688-569c-406c-9a29-55d2c2f10c3a/3000x3000/1534474038artwork.jpg?aid=rss_feed"/>
      <itunes:duration>00:25:52</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>Slush is one of the fastest growing events and communities for startups globally, bringing together both local and international companies to help inspire and support youth to pursue their dreams of entrepreneurship.  

Today, we welcome Chen Wang, the person who helped the event break into the Chinese market, starting with Beijing in 2015. With Slush Shanghai coming up next month (September 7 to 8), Chen talks to us about the challenges of entrepreneurship, including maintaining good relationships with the government, protecting intellectual property and other essential tips to prospering in China. 

Listen to the end for a special surprise for our dedicated listeners, on behalf of Slush China!</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>Slush is one of the fastest growing events and communities for startups globally, bringing together both local and international companies to help inspire and support youth to pursue their dreams of entrepreneurship.  

Today, we welcome Chen Wang, the person who helped the event break into the Chinese market, starting with Beijing in 2015. With Slush Shanghai coming up next month (September 7 to 8), Chen talks to us about the challenges of entrepreneurship, including maintaining good relationships with the government, protecting intellectual property and other essential tips to prospering in China. 

Listen to the end for a special surprise for our dedicated listeners, on behalf of Slush China!</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:episode>72</itunes:episode>
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      <title>The Rise of Fintech with Wei Hopeman, Co-Founder and Managing Partner of Arbor Ventures</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>Fintech has come a long way in China, from barely being recognized to one of the fastest growing markets in the region. As the world’s leader in Fintech technology, China is a breeding ground for Internet finance companies, and accordingly, investment in the industry. With millions of users and an ever-growing number of fintech unicorns, the future of Internet finance looks exceedingly bright in China.</p>
<p>Today, we present another special episode recorded live at RISE Conference 2018, where Oscar Ramos sat down with venture capitalist and fintech investor Wei Hopeman. After beginning her career in financial services and investment banking, Wei co-founded Arbor Ventures in 2013, the first VC fund specialized in fintech in the Asian ecosystem. She talks to us about the growth of fintech, the benefits of corporate VCs, and how founders and corporate VCs can improve their interactions with each other, as well as many other topics.</p>
<p>Many thanks to RISE Conference 2018 for gathering global elites in Hong Kong and supporting China Startup Pulse to present good quality content for our listeners.</p>
<p>Show notes:<br />
1:02 Intro 1:40 How Wei got into financial services 5:20 Going into investment banking 7:04 The growth of fintech in Asia 9:06 The lack of infrastructure in financial services 11:52 Launching fintech in China 14:52 Benefits of corporate VCs 16:42 Key questions a founder should ask corporate VCs 18:05 Key difference between types of VCs 20:36 Educating corporates in working with startups 22:51 Women in VC 29:51 The future of Arbor Ventures</p>
<p>As always, thanks to our host Oscar Ramos, guest Wei Hopeman, editor David and Geep, organizer Chinaccelerator and sponsor People Squared. Be sure to check out our website at chinaccelerator.com!</p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Wed, 8 Aug 2018 03:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Chinaccelerator)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Fintech has come a long way in China, from barely being recognized to one of the fastest growing markets in the region. As the world’s leader in Fintech technology, China is a breeding ground for Internet finance companies, and accordingly, investment in the industry. With millions of users and an ever-growing number of fintech unicorns, the future of Internet finance looks exceedingly bright in China.</p>
<p>Today, we present another special episode recorded live at RISE Conference 2018, where Oscar Ramos sat down with venture capitalist and fintech investor Wei Hopeman. After beginning her career in financial services and investment banking, Wei co-founded Arbor Ventures in 2013, the first VC fund specialized in fintech in the Asian ecosystem. She talks to us about the growth of fintech, the benefits of corporate VCs, and how founders and corporate VCs can improve their interactions with each other, as well as many other topics.</p>
<p>Many thanks to RISE Conference 2018 for gathering global elites in Hong Kong and supporting China Startup Pulse to present good quality content for our listeners.</p>
<p>Show notes:<br />
1:02 Intro 1:40 How Wei got into financial services 5:20 Going into investment banking 7:04 The growth of fintech in Asia 9:06 The lack of infrastructure in financial services 11:52 Launching fintech in China 14:52 Benefits of corporate VCs 16:42 Key questions a founder should ask corporate VCs 18:05 Key difference between types of VCs 20:36 Educating corporates in working with startups 22:51 Women in VC 29:51 The future of Arbor Ventures</p>
<p>As always, thanks to our host Oscar Ramos, guest Wei Hopeman, editor David and Geep, organizer Chinaccelerator and sponsor People Squared. Be sure to check out our website at chinaccelerator.com!</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>The Rise of Fintech with Wei Hopeman, Co-Founder and Managing Partner of Arbor Ventures</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Chinaccelerator</itunes:author>
      <itunes:image href="https://image.simplecastcdn.com/images/a0e035/a0e0352f-fcbe-4ea1-813c-f1a09496ed52/9353f283-0d56-40fd-8fc1-65d46f6f33d1/3000x3000/1533697102artwork.jpg?aid=rss_feed"/>
      <itunes:duration>00:31:05</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>Fintech has come a long way in China, from barely being recognized to one of the fastest growing markets in the region. As the world’s leader in Fintech technology, China is a breeding ground for Internet finance companies, and accordingly, investment in the industry. With millions of users and an ever-growing number of fintech unicorns, the future of Internet finance looks exceedingly bright in China.

Today, we present another special episode recorded live at RISE Conference 2018, where Oscar Ramos sat down with venture capitalist and fintech investor Wei Hopeman. After beginning her career in financial services and investment banking, Wei co-founded Arbor Ventures in 2013, the first VC fund specialized in fintech in the Asian ecosystem. She talks to us about the growth of fintech, the benefits of corporate VCs, and how founders and corporate VCs can improve their interactions with each other, as well as many other topics. 

Many thanks to RISE Conference 2018 for gathering global elites in Hong Kong and supporting China Startup Pulse to present good quality content for our listeners.</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>Fintech has come a long way in China, from barely being recognized to one of the fastest growing markets in the region. As the world’s leader in Fintech technology, China is a breeding ground for Internet finance companies, and accordingly, investment in the industry. With millions of users and an ever-growing number of fintech unicorns, the future of Internet finance looks exceedingly bright in China.

Today, we present another special episode recorded live at RISE Conference 2018, where Oscar Ramos sat down with venture capitalist and fintech investor Wei Hopeman. After beginning her career in financial services and investment banking, Wei co-founded Arbor Ventures in 2013, the first VC fund specialized in fintech in the Asian ecosystem. She talks to us about the growth of fintech, the benefits of corporate VCs, and how founders and corporate VCs can improve their interactions with each other, as well as many other topics. 

Many thanks to RISE Conference 2018 for gathering global elites in Hong Kong and supporting China Startup Pulse to present good quality content for our listeners.</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>accelerator, corporates, unicorn, wei hopeman, fintech, asia ecosystem, vc, financial services, china, founders, chinaccelerator, sosv, venture capital, corporate vc, internet finance, women in vc, arbor ventures, investment banking</itunes:keywords>
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      <itunes:episode>71</itunes:episode>
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      <title>Market Localization of the Highest Valued Unicorn with Sam Gellman, First Foreign Employee of Uber China</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>On this day 2 years ago, China’s ride-hailing industry experienced a major turning point - Didi purchased Uber’s China operations and Uber took a 20% stake in Didi. So far Uber has expanded in more than 449 cities and 66 countries. Today, many companies are still trying to elbow into this crowded industry.</p>
<p>In this episode, we are lucky to have Sam Gellman as our guest, the first international Uber employee that took care of the company’s expansion in Asia and China. Sam shared his past experience in redesigning Uber’s playbook to adjust to China’s unique ecosystem, channels for communication and user acquisition. Despite knowing only a bit of Chinese, Sam was assigned to create a Chinese name for Uber. Fortunately, the Chinese name 优步 turned out to be one of the most well-received foreign company names. As the person who worked on market localization for Uber, Sam also shared how they took the company from nothing to a massive exit within 3 years.</p>
<p>Also check out Uber CEO and Co-Founder Travis Kalanick's statement on the merger: https://www.uber.com/newsroom/uber-china-didi/</p>
<p>Many thanks to RISE Conference 2018 for gathering global elites in Hong Kong and supporting China Startup Pulse to present good quality content for our listeners.</p>
<p>Show notes:<br />
Intro 1:44 Coming to Hong Kong with Goldman Sachs 2:40 Scaling Uber to Europe 8:30 The most surprising part of launching in Asia 10:08 Choosing a Chinese name for Uber 12:35 The key lesson learned from Uber 17:31 Having a global footprint while still improving your product 23:31 What’s keeping Sam busy 25:30</p>
<p>As always, thanks to our host Oscar Ramos, guest Sam Gellman, editor David and Geep, organizer Chinaccelerator and sponsor People Squared. Be sure to check out our website at chinaccelerator.com!</p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Wed, 1 Aug 2018 03:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Chinaccelerator)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>On this day 2 years ago, China’s ride-hailing industry experienced a major turning point - Didi purchased Uber’s China operations and Uber took a 20% stake in Didi. So far Uber has expanded in more than 449 cities and 66 countries. Today, many companies are still trying to elbow into this crowded industry.</p>
<p>In this episode, we are lucky to have Sam Gellman as our guest, the first international Uber employee that took care of the company’s expansion in Asia and China. Sam shared his past experience in redesigning Uber’s playbook to adjust to China’s unique ecosystem, channels for communication and user acquisition. Despite knowing only a bit of Chinese, Sam was assigned to create a Chinese name for Uber. Fortunately, the Chinese name 优步 turned out to be one of the most well-received foreign company names. As the person who worked on market localization for Uber, Sam also shared how they took the company from nothing to a massive exit within 3 years.</p>
<p>Also check out Uber CEO and Co-Founder Travis Kalanick's statement on the merger: https://www.uber.com/newsroom/uber-china-didi/</p>
<p>Many thanks to RISE Conference 2018 for gathering global elites in Hong Kong and supporting China Startup Pulse to present good quality content for our listeners.</p>
<p>Show notes:<br />
Intro 1:44 Coming to Hong Kong with Goldman Sachs 2:40 Scaling Uber to Europe 8:30 The most surprising part of launching in Asia 10:08 Choosing a Chinese name for Uber 12:35 The key lesson learned from Uber 17:31 Having a global footprint while still improving your product 23:31 What’s keeping Sam busy 25:30</p>
<p>As always, thanks to our host Oscar Ramos, guest Sam Gellman, editor David and Geep, organizer Chinaccelerator and sponsor People Squared. Be sure to check out our website at chinaccelerator.com!</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>Market Localization of the Highest Valued Unicorn with Sam Gellman, First Foreign Employee of Uber China</itunes:title>
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      <itunes:summary>On this day 2 years ago, China’s ride-hailing industry experienced a major turning point - Didi purchased Uber’s China operations and Uber took a 20% stake in Didi. So far Uber has expanded in more than 449 cities and 66 countries. Today, many companies are still trying to elbow into this crowded industry.

In this episode, we are lucky to have Sam Gellman as our guest, the first international Uber employee that took care of the company’s expansion in Asia and China. Sam shared his past experience in redesigning Uber’s playbook to adjust to China’s unique ecosystem, channels for communication and user acquisition. Despite knowing only a bit of Chinese, Sam was assigned to create a Chinese name for Uber. Fortunately, the Chinese name 优步 turned out to be one of the most well-received foreign company names. As the person who worked on market localization for Uber, Sam also shared how they took the company from nothing to a massive exit within 3 years.</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>On this day 2 years ago, China’s ride-hailing industry experienced a major turning point - Didi purchased Uber’s China operations and Uber took a 20% stake in Didi. So far Uber has expanded in more than 449 cities and 66 countries. Today, many companies are still trying to elbow into this crowded industry.

In this episode, we are lucky to have Sam Gellman as our guest, the first international Uber employee that took care of the company’s expansion in Asia and China. Sam shared his past experience in redesigning Uber’s playbook to adjust to China’s unique ecosystem, channels for communication and user acquisition. Despite knowing only a bit of Chinese, Sam was assigned to create a Chinese name for Uber. Fortunately, the Chinese name 优步 turned out to be one of the most well-received foreign company names. As the person who worked on market localization for Uber, Sam also shared how they took the company from nothing to a massive exit within 3 years.</itunes:subtitle>
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      <title>The Golden Rule of WeChat Marketing with the “Ronin of Marketing and Agency Work” Kenneth Cheung, Co-Founder at Actionable Data</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>China is obsessed with data. But how can you access it, and leverage it to your benefit? Kenneth Cheung shines a light on how you should be using data to market yourself or your company, and shares with us the “golden rule of WeChat marketing”. From initially acquiring data to actually learning how to use it properly, Kenneth walks this integral process while talking about his work in consulting on brand management and KOL influencer marketing in China. He also talks about the power of mini-apps, the first principals of market, and much, much more! If you want to market your brand on WeChat to its maximum potential, this is a can’t-miss episode.</p>
<p>Show Notes<br />
1:42 Introduction 3:02 Describing China’s business ecosystem 5:11 China’s obsession with data 7:45 The process of doing a data search 11:00 Getting around closed systems 14:00 WeChat as a future platform for e-commerce 18:27 The power of mini apps 22:50 A crash course on KOLs 27:18 Lightning round questions</p>
<p>Feel free to leave a comment and start a conversation with us! If you have an ideal guest whom you would like to listen to, please let us know and we'll do our best to realize it!</p>
<p>Many thanks to our host Ryan Shuken, guest Kenneth Cheung, editor David and Geep, organizer Chinaccelerator and sponsor People Squared. Be sure to check out our website at chinaccelerator.com!</p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Wed, 25 Jul 2018 03:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Chinaccelerator)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>China is obsessed with data. But how can you access it, and leverage it to your benefit? Kenneth Cheung shines a light on how you should be using data to market yourself or your company, and shares with us the “golden rule of WeChat marketing”. From initially acquiring data to actually learning how to use it properly, Kenneth walks this integral process while talking about his work in consulting on brand management and KOL influencer marketing in China. He also talks about the power of mini-apps, the first principals of market, and much, much more! If you want to market your brand on WeChat to its maximum potential, this is a can’t-miss episode.</p>
<p>Show Notes<br />
1:42 Introduction 3:02 Describing China’s business ecosystem 5:11 China’s obsession with data 7:45 The process of doing a data search 11:00 Getting around closed systems 14:00 WeChat as a future platform for e-commerce 18:27 The power of mini apps 22:50 A crash course on KOLs 27:18 Lightning round questions</p>
<p>Feel free to leave a comment and start a conversation with us! If you have an ideal guest whom you would like to listen to, please let us know and we'll do our best to realize it!</p>
<p>Many thanks to our host Ryan Shuken, guest Kenneth Cheung, editor David and Geep, organizer Chinaccelerator and sponsor People Squared. Be sure to check out our website at chinaccelerator.com!</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>The Golden Rule of WeChat Marketing with the “Ronin of Marketing and Agency Work” Kenneth Cheung, Co-Founder at Actionable Data</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Chinaccelerator</itunes:author>
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      <itunes:duration>00:30:36</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>China is obsessed with data. But how can you access it, and leverage it to your benefit? Kenneth Cheung shines a light on how you should be using data to market yourself or your company, and shares with us the “golden rule of WeChat marketing”. From initially acquiring data to actually learning how to use it properly, Kenneth walks this integral process while talking about his work in consulting on brand management and KOL influencer marketing in China. He also talks about the power of mini-apps, the first principals of market, and much, much more! If you want to market your brand on WeChat to its maximum potential, this is a can’t-miss episode.</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>China is obsessed with data. But how can you access it, and leverage it to your benefit? Kenneth Cheung shines a light on how you should be using data to market yourself or your company, and shares with us the “golden rule of WeChat marketing”. From initially acquiring data to actually learning how to use it properly, Kenneth walks this integral process while talking about his work in consulting on brand management and KOL influencer marketing in China. He also talks about the power of mini-apps, the first principals of market, and much, much more! If you want to market your brand on WeChat to its maximum potential, this is a can’t-miss episode.</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>accelerator, wechat, data, vc, baidu, china, ecosystem, kol, e-commerce, chinaccelerator, platform, sosv, venture capital, business, actionable data, mini-apps, tencent, brand management, shanghai, affiliate marketing, kenneth cheung, principals of market</itunes:keywords>
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      <title>Principles of Investment with Jörn Helms, Senior Advisor at Bank of Taizhou</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>What do investors look for in startups? This week, we have invited Jörn Helms, Senior Advisor at the Bank of Taizhou and Country Director for China with Portier Technologies. Portier is a smartphone platform for luxury hotels allowing guests to access the internet as well as order hotel services thereby increasing hotel revenues. With an extensive background in small business landing (as the former VP of Bank of Taizhou) and angel investing, Jörn is experienced with both large companies and small startups entering China.</p>
<p>From his first days in Taizhou, when he had to re-learn Chinese because of the local dialect, to his time as a mentor for Chinaccelerator, Jörn has personally crossed borders and found success in a new environment. Hear what he has to say about succeeding in the China startup scene from the perspective of an investor!</p>
<p>Know more about Bank of Taizhou: https://www.bloomberg.com/news/features/2017-11-15/military-drills-help-china-s-best-bank-toughen-up-its-staff</p>
<p>Show Notes: Jörn’s background 1:44 Banking Career in China 3:16 The principal of “see and touch” 12:39 Being a mentor 15:29 Breaking the China barrier as a foreign investor 21:03 Lightning round questions 23:20</p>
<p>Feel free to leave a comment and start a conversation with us! If you have an ideal guest whom you would like to listen to, please let us know and we'll do our best to realize it!</p>
<p>Many thanks to our host Ryan Shuken, guest Jörn Helms, editor David and Geep, organizer Chinaccelerator and sponsor People Squared.</p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Wed, 18 Jul 2018 03:30:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Chinaccelerator)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>What do investors look for in startups? This week, we have invited Jörn Helms, Senior Advisor at the Bank of Taizhou and Country Director for China with Portier Technologies. Portier is a smartphone platform for luxury hotels allowing guests to access the internet as well as order hotel services thereby increasing hotel revenues. With an extensive background in small business landing (as the former VP of Bank of Taizhou) and angel investing, Jörn is experienced with both large companies and small startups entering China.</p>
<p>From his first days in Taizhou, when he had to re-learn Chinese because of the local dialect, to his time as a mentor for Chinaccelerator, Jörn has personally crossed borders and found success in a new environment. Hear what he has to say about succeeding in the China startup scene from the perspective of an investor!</p>
<p>Know more about Bank of Taizhou: https://www.bloomberg.com/news/features/2017-11-15/military-drills-help-china-s-best-bank-toughen-up-its-staff</p>
<p>Show Notes: Jörn’s background 1:44 Banking Career in China 3:16 The principal of “see and touch” 12:39 Being a mentor 15:29 Breaking the China barrier as a foreign investor 21:03 Lightning round questions 23:20</p>
<p>Feel free to leave a comment and start a conversation with us! If you have an ideal guest whom you would like to listen to, please let us know and we'll do our best to realize it!</p>
<p>Many thanks to our host Ryan Shuken, guest Jörn Helms, editor David and Geep, organizer Chinaccelerator and sponsor People Squared.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:summary>What do investors look for in startups? This week, we have invited Jörn Helms, Senior Advisor at the Bank of Taizhou and Country Director for China with Portier Technologies, which helps hotels improve revenue, guest satisfaction, and reduce opex. With an extensive background in small business landing (as the former VP of Bank of Taizhou) and angel investing, Jörn is experienced with both large companies and small startups entering China.</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>What do investors look for in startups? This week, we have invited Jörn Helms, Senior Advisor at the Bank of Taizhou and Country Director for China with Portier Technologies, which helps hotels improve revenue, guest satisfaction, and reduce opex. With an extensive background in small business landing (as the former VP of Bank of Taizhou) and angel investing, Jörn is experienced with both large companies and small startups entering China.</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>accelerator, banking, vc, portier, china, cross border, chinaccelerator, joern helms, sosv, venture capital, jörn helms, deniz tekerek, dialect, investment, bank of taizhou, taizhou</itunes:keywords>
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      <title>The Bumps You’ll Run Into on Your Entrepreneurship Journey; 2018 8x8 Speaker Series (3/3) with Nishtha Mehta, Ziv Rotenberg, and James Lalonde</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>Both new startup founders and veteran business owners may often find themselves confronted by conflict, whether they’re personal, familial, or business-related complications. This week, our mentors share some of their own personal experiences in conquering these obstacles and their words of wisdom on what helps a company succeed.</p>
<p>Join us for our 8x8 Series Finale, where our final three speakers emphasize the value in venturing out into the unknown to revive passion and to crush fear, stress the importance in organizing a proper IP strategy for a business in China’s vast market, and offer strategic advice to help better the life of a startup. We hope you enjoy!</p>
<p>Show Notes<br />
2:53 Nishtha’s talk on committing to the uncomfortable<br />
12:22 Ziv’s talk on intellectual property<br />
19:55 James’ talk on the Tao of startups</p>
<p>Feel free to leave a comment and start a conversation with us! If you have an ideal guest whom you would like to listen to, please let us know and we'll do our best to realize it!</p>
<p>Many thanks to our host Ryan Shuken, speakers Nishtha Mehta, Ziv Rotenberg, and James Lalonde, editor David and Geep, organizer Chinaccelerator and sponsor People Squared. Be sure to check out our website at chinaccelerator.com!</p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Wed, 11 Jul 2018 02:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Chinaccelerator)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Both new startup founders and veteran business owners may often find themselves confronted by conflict, whether they’re personal, familial, or business-related complications. This week, our mentors share some of their own personal experiences in conquering these obstacles and their words of wisdom on what helps a company succeed.</p>
<p>Join us for our 8x8 Series Finale, where our final three speakers emphasize the value in venturing out into the unknown to revive passion and to crush fear, stress the importance in organizing a proper IP strategy for a business in China’s vast market, and offer strategic advice to help better the life of a startup. We hope you enjoy!</p>
<p>Show Notes<br />
2:53 Nishtha’s talk on committing to the uncomfortable<br />
12:22 Ziv’s talk on intellectual property<br />
19:55 James’ talk on the Tao of startups</p>
<p>Feel free to leave a comment and start a conversation with us! If you have an ideal guest whom you would like to listen to, please let us know and we'll do our best to realize it!</p>
<p>Many thanks to our host Ryan Shuken, speakers Nishtha Mehta, Ziv Rotenberg, and James Lalonde, editor David and Geep, organizer Chinaccelerator and sponsor People Squared. Be sure to check out our website at chinaccelerator.com!</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>The Bumps You’ll Run Into on Your Entrepreneurship Journey; 2018 8x8 Speaker Series (3/3) with Nishtha Mehta, Ziv Rotenberg, and James Lalonde</itunes:title>
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      <itunes:duration>00:36:18</itunes:duration>
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Join us for our 8x8 Series Finale, where our final three speakers emphasize the value in venturing out into the unknown to revive passion and to crush fear, stress the importance in organizing a proper IP strategy for a business in China’s vast market, and offer strategic advice to help better the life of a startup. We hope you enjoy!</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>Both new startup founders and veteran business owners may often find themselves confronted by conflict, whether they’re personal, familial, or business-related complications. This week, our mentors share some of their own personal experiences in conquering these obstacles and their words of wisdom on what helps a company succeed.  

Join us for our 8x8 Series Finale, where our final three speakers emphasize the value in venturing out into the unknown to revive passion and to crush fear, stress the importance in organizing a proper IP strategy for a business in China’s vast market, and offer strategic advice to help better the life of a startup. We hope you enjoy!</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>accelerator, journey, vc, china, james lalonde, chinaccelerator, meditation, sosv, ip, venture capital, nishtha mehta, network, mentor, ziv rotenberg, shanghai, beijing, elevator pitch, people squared, pitch deck</itunes:keywords>
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      <title>5 Mistakes Raising Money and How NOT to Run Your Business; 2018 8x8 Speaker Series (2/3) with Trevor Owens, Rich Bishop, and Kenneth Cheung</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>Being a good entrepreneur is a multi-faceted skill. Proficiency in one aspect does not guarantee overall success, but failure or inefficiency in one discipline could cost you your business. Our guests this week provide sage advice on topics ranging from securing funding to proper networking.</p>
<p>With years of experience in the China Startup scene, this week’s guests speak from the heart on their mistakes and lessons learned: how they sought the wrong advice, pursued the wrong business ideas, and how you should deal with the problems you will inevitably face while building your business. Whether you are an experienced entrepreneur or someone struggling with their first start-up, this episode is worth a listen!</p>
<p>Show Notes<br />
2:07 Trevor’s talk<br />
12:33 Rich’s talk<br />
19:46 Kenneth’s talk</p>
<p>Feel free to leave a comment and start a conversation with us! If you have an ideal guest whom you would like to listen to, please let us know and we'll do our best to realize it!</p>
<p>Many thanks to our host Ryan Shuken, speakers Trevor Owens, Rich Bishop, and Kenneth Cheung, editor David and Geep, organizer Chinaccelerator and sponsor People Squared. Be sure to check out our website at chinaccelerator.com!</p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Wed, 4 Jul 2018 02:40:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Chinaccelerator)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Being a good entrepreneur is a multi-faceted skill. Proficiency in one aspect does not guarantee overall success, but failure or inefficiency in one discipline could cost you your business. Our guests this week provide sage advice on topics ranging from securing funding to proper networking.</p>
<p>With years of experience in the China Startup scene, this week’s guests speak from the heart on their mistakes and lessons learned: how they sought the wrong advice, pursued the wrong business ideas, and how you should deal with the problems you will inevitably face while building your business. Whether you are an experienced entrepreneur or someone struggling with their first start-up, this episode is worth a listen!</p>
<p>Show Notes<br />
2:07 Trevor’s talk<br />
12:33 Rich’s talk<br />
19:46 Kenneth’s talk</p>
<p>Feel free to leave a comment and start a conversation with us! If you have an ideal guest whom you would like to listen to, please let us know and we'll do our best to realize it!</p>
<p>Many thanks to our host Ryan Shuken, speakers Trevor Owens, Rich Bishop, and Kenneth Cheung, editor David and Geep, organizer Chinaccelerator and sponsor People Squared. Be sure to check out our website at chinaccelerator.com!</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>5 Mistakes Raising Money and How NOT to Run Your Business; 2018 8x8 Speaker Series (2/3) with Trevor Owens, Rich Bishop, and Kenneth Cheung</itunes:title>
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      <itunes:duration>00:28:39</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>Being a good entrepreneur is a multi-faceted skill. Proficiency in one aspect does not guarantee overall success, but failure or inefficiency in one discipline could cost you your business. Our guests this week provide sage advice on topics ranging from securing funding to proper networking.

With years of experience in the China Startup scene, this week’s guests speak from the heart on their mistakes and lessons learned: how they sought the wrong advice, pursued the wrong business ideas, and how you should deal with the problems you will inevitably face while building your business. Whether you are an experienced entrepreneur or someone struggling with their first start-up, this episode is worth a listen!</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>Being a good entrepreneur is a multi-faceted skill. Proficiency in one aspect does not guarantee overall success, but failure or inefficiency in one discipline could cost you your business. Our guests this week provide sage advice on topics ranging from securing funding to proper networking.

With years of experience in the China Startup scene, this week’s guests speak from the heart on their mistakes and lessons learned: how they sought the wrong advice, pursued the wrong business ideas, and how you should deal with the problems you will inevitably face while building your business. Whether you are an experienced entrepreneur or someone struggling with their first start-up, this episode is worth a listen!</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>accelerator, appinchina, author, funding, curiosity china, trevor owens, vc, china, rich bishop, chinaccelerator, javelin, sosv, startup, venture capital, podcast, finance, business, people squared, kenneth cheung</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:episode>66</itunes:episode>
    </item>
    <item>
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      <title>The Power of Focus, the Hidden Benefits of a Mid-Life Crisis, and the Importance of Having Fun; 2018 8x8 Speaker Series (1/3) with Ilya Cheremnikh, Tim Coghlan, and Curt Shi</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>Being an entrepreneur is often defined not by one’s success, but by the way one deals with failure. This week’s three guests have all used their past experiences, both positive and negative, to find success in their current endeavors.</p>
<p>From a past career as a skateboarder to the challenge of overcoming a midlife crisis, this week’s speakers have experienced a unique set of highs and lows which have enhanced their focus, creativity, and self-awareness, among other things. Make sure you don’t miss this episode!</p>
<p>Show Notes<br />
2:20 Ilya’s talk<br />
9:54 Tim’s talk<br />
17:42 Curt’s talk</p>
<p>Feel free to leave a comment and start a conversation with us! If you have an ideal guest whom you would like to listen to, please let us know and we'll do our best to realize it!</p>
<p>Many thanks to our host Ryan Shuken, speakers Ilya Cheremnikh, Tim Coghlan, and Curt Shi, editor David and Geep, organizer Chinaccelerator and sponsor People Squared. Be sure to check out our website at chinaccelerator.com!</p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Thu, 28 Jun 2018 02:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Chinaccelerator)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Being an entrepreneur is often defined not by one’s success, but by the way one deals with failure. This week’s three guests have all used their past experiences, both positive and negative, to find success in their current endeavors.</p>
<p>From a past career as a skateboarder to the challenge of overcoming a midlife crisis, this week’s speakers have experienced a unique set of highs and lows which have enhanced their focus, creativity, and self-awareness, among other things. Make sure you don’t miss this episode!</p>
<p>Show Notes<br />
2:20 Ilya’s talk<br />
9:54 Tim’s talk<br />
17:42 Curt’s talk</p>
<p>Feel free to leave a comment and start a conversation with us! If you have an ideal guest whom you would like to listen to, please let us know and we'll do our best to realize it!</p>
<p>Many thanks to our host Ryan Shuken, speakers Ilya Cheremnikh, Tim Coghlan, and Curt Shi, editor David and Geep, organizer Chinaccelerator and sponsor People Squared. Be sure to check out our website at chinaccelerator.com!</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>The Power of Focus, the Hidden Benefits of a Mid-Life Crisis, and the Importance of Having Fun; 2018 8x8 Speaker Series (1/3) with Ilya Cheremnikh, Tim Coghlan, and Curt Shi</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Chinaccelerator</itunes:author>
      <itunes:image href="https://image.simplecastcdn.com/images/a0e035/a0e0352f-fcbe-4ea1-813c-f1a09496ed52/9779435c-1ca8-430c-a010-b064485e8127/3000x3000/1530113316artwork.jpg?aid=rss_feed"/>
      <itunes:duration>00:25:11</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>Being an entrepreneur is often defined not by one’s success, but by the way one deals with failure. This week’s three guests have all used their past experiences, both positive and negative, to find success in their current endeavors. 

From a past career as a skateboarder to the challenge of overcoming a midlife crisis, this week’s speakers have experienced a unique set of highs and lows which have enhanced their focus, creativity, and self-awareness, among other things. Make sure you don’t miss this episode!</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>Being an entrepreneur is often defined not by one’s success, but by the way one deals with failure. This week’s three guests have all used their past experiences, both positive and negative, to find success in their current endeavors. 

From a past career as a skateboarder to the challenge of overcoming a midlife crisis, this week’s speakers have experienced a unique set of highs and lows which have enhanced their focus, creativity, and self-awareness, among other things. Make sure you don’t miss this episode!</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>accelerator, vc, tim coghlan, skateboarding, curt shi, china, failure, consulting, chinaccelerator, leader, venture capital, mentor, ilya cheremnikh, mid-life crisis, experience, self-awareness, focus, accountability, mentality， creativity, success</itunes:keywords>
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      <title>What is Blockchain and What Does its Future Hold? With Darren Camas, Senior Advisor at Emurgo</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>This episode’s guest is a pioneer and innovator in blockchain technology and cryptocurrency: Emurgo senior advisor and Chinaccelerator alumnus Darren Camas! He talks about his career and experiences in crypto, an industry for which he has been at the forefront since the beginning. He stresses the importance of having responsible business practices, the inability to plan for luck, and other lessons learned. Also interesting is his discussion of Cardano, the revolutionary generation 3 blockchain technology, which pushes improved scalability, interoperability, and sustainability. This podcast is sure to be thought-provoking and informational to both blockchain enthusiasts and those less accustomed with the industry.</p>
<p>Show Notes:<br />
01:50 Darren Camas’ background<br />
02:48 Discussion of Darren’s career in crypto<br />
04:57 An overview of Darren’s role of senior adviser at Emurgo<br />
14:21 Lessons learned and advice<br />
27:43 Predictions for the future<br />
30:07 Recommendations on the market<br />
32:33 Darren’s contact information</p>
<p>Feel free to leave a comment and start a conversation with us! If you have an ideal guest whom you would like to listen to, please let us know and we'll do our best to realize it!</p>
<p>Many thanks to our host Ryan Shuken, guest Darren Camas, editor David and Geep, organizer Chinaccelerator and sponsor People Squared. Be sure to check out our website at chinaccelerator.com!</p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Wed, 20 Jun 2018 03:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Chinaccelerator)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>This episode’s guest is a pioneer and innovator in blockchain technology and cryptocurrency: Emurgo senior advisor and Chinaccelerator alumnus Darren Camas! He talks about his career and experiences in crypto, an industry for which he has been at the forefront since the beginning. He stresses the importance of having responsible business practices, the inability to plan for luck, and other lessons learned. Also interesting is his discussion of Cardano, the revolutionary generation 3 blockchain technology, which pushes improved scalability, interoperability, and sustainability. This podcast is sure to be thought-provoking and informational to both blockchain enthusiasts and those less accustomed with the industry.</p>
<p>Show Notes:<br />
01:50 Darren Camas’ background<br />
02:48 Discussion of Darren’s career in crypto<br />
04:57 An overview of Darren’s role of senior adviser at Emurgo<br />
14:21 Lessons learned and advice<br />
27:43 Predictions for the future<br />
30:07 Recommendations on the market<br />
32:33 Darren’s contact information</p>
<p>Feel free to leave a comment and start a conversation with us! If you have an ideal guest whom you would like to listen to, please let us know and we'll do our best to realize it!</p>
<p>Many thanks to our host Ryan Shuken, guest Darren Camas, editor David and Geep, organizer Chinaccelerator and sponsor People Squared. Be sure to check out our website at chinaccelerator.com!</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>What is Blockchain and What Does its Future Hold? With Darren Camas, Senior Advisor at Emurgo</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Chinaccelerator</itunes:author>
      <itunes:image href="https://image.simplecastcdn.com/images/a0e035/a0e0352f-fcbe-4ea1-813c-f1a09496ed52/85cfcb53-f226-4ce1-ac3d-eed39e703181/3000x3000/1529463313artwork.jpg?aid=rss_feed"/>
      <itunes:duration>00:34:35</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>This episode’s guest is a pioneer and innovator in blockchain technology and cryptocurrency: Emurgo senior advisor and Chinaccelerator alumnus Darren Camas! He talks about his career and experiences in crypto, an industry for which he has been at the forefront since the beginning. He stresses the importance of having responsible business practices, the inability to plan for luck, and other lessons learned. Also interesting is his discussion of Cardano, the revolutionary generation 3 blockchain technology, which pushes improved scalability, interoperability, and sustainability. This podcast is sure to be thought-provoking and informational to both blockchain enthusiasts and those less accustomed with the industry.</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>This episode’s guest is a pioneer and innovator in blockchain technology and cryptocurrency: Emurgo senior advisor and Chinaccelerator alumnus Darren Camas! He talks about his career and experiences in crypto, an industry for which he has been at the forefront since the beginning. He stresses the importance of having responsible business practices, the inability to plan for luck, and other lessons learned. Also interesting is his discussion of Cardano, the revolutionary generation 3 blockchain technology, which pushes improved scalability, interoperability, and sustainability. This podcast is sure to be thought-provoking and informational to both blockchain enthusiasts and those less accustomed with the industry.</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>accelerator, cryptocurrency, vc, cardano, darren camas, china, emurgo, chinaccelerator, interoperability, generation 2, sosv, startup, venture capital, podcast, generation 3, business, blockchain, sustainability, people squared, scalability, bitcoin</itunes:keywords>
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      <itunes:episode>64</itunes:episode>
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      <title>Building a dockless bikesharing kingdom with Florian Bohnert, head of Global Partnerships for Mobike</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>In this episode, we have invited Florian Bohnert, head of global partnerships for Mobike. As an entrepreneur, Florian developed an interest for Asian culture and the East very early on and has been leading Mobike’s global expansion journey, especially in China. He stresses the importance of being in the country where you want to expand your business and letting passion drive you. He also touches upon the positive impact mobike has on people’s health other than the obvious convenience it has brought to people’s lives.</p>
<p>Show Notes:<br />
1:35 Florian intro<br />
3:09 what is mobike<br />
6:20 how mobike expands globally<br />
8:09 Florian’s entrepreneurial journey<br />
12:00 Asian pop culture and East<br />
15:19 French tech movement<br />
17:00 challenges and Chinese colleagues<br />
20:40 Let passion drive you<br />
22:00 be in the country you want to expand your business in<br />
23:40 Learning chinese is important<br />
24:57 How mobike has built success globally<br />
30:25 Mobike's model<br />
35:20 positive impact mobike health<br />
43:52 opportunity in China<br />
47:22 lightning round of questions<br />
51:30 how to connect with Florian</p>
<p>Feel free to leave a comment and start a conversation with us! If you have an ideal guest whom you would like to listen to, please let us know and we'll do our best to realize it!</p>
<p>Many thanks to our host Ryan Shuken, guest Florian Bohnert, editor David and Geep, organizer Chinaccelerator and sponsor People Squared. Be sure to check out our website at chinaccelerator.com!</p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Wed, 13 Jun 2018 02:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Chinaccelerator)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>In this episode, we have invited Florian Bohnert, head of global partnerships for Mobike. As an entrepreneur, Florian developed an interest for Asian culture and the East very early on and has been leading Mobike’s global expansion journey, especially in China. He stresses the importance of being in the country where you want to expand your business and letting passion drive you. He also touches upon the positive impact mobike has on people’s health other than the obvious convenience it has brought to people’s lives.</p>
<p>Show Notes:<br />
1:35 Florian intro<br />
3:09 what is mobike<br />
6:20 how mobike expands globally<br />
8:09 Florian’s entrepreneurial journey<br />
12:00 Asian pop culture and East<br />
15:19 French tech movement<br />
17:00 challenges and Chinese colleagues<br />
20:40 Let passion drive you<br />
22:00 be in the country you want to expand your business in<br />
23:40 Learning chinese is important<br />
24:57 How mobike has built success globally<br />
30:25 Mobike's model<br />
35:20 positive impact mobike health<br />
43:52 opportunity in China<br />
47:22 lightning round of questions<br />
51:30 how to connect with Florian</p>
<p>Feel free to leave a comment and start a conversation with us! If you have an ideal guest whom you would like to listen to, please let us know and we'll do our best to realize it!</p>
<p>Many thanks to our host Ryan Shuken, guest Florian Bohnert, editor David and Geep, organizer Chinaccelerator and sponsor People Squared. Be sure to check out our website at chinaccelerator.com!</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>Building a dockless bikesharing kingdom with Florian Bohnert, head of Global Partnerships for Mobike</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Chinaccelerator</itunes:author>
      <itunes:image href="https://image.simplecastcdn.com/images/a0e035/a0e0352f-fcbe-4ea1-813c-f1a09496ed52/f9106b01-cdae-4f70-b3f4-c235204ed904/3000x3000/1528160143artwork.jpg?aid=rss_feed"/>
      <itunes:duration>00:52:56</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>In this episode, we have invited Florian Bohnert, head of global partnerships for Mobike. As an entrepreneur, Florian developed an interest for Asian culture and the East very early on and has been leading Mobike’s global expansion journey, especially in China. He stresses the importance of being in the country where you want to expand your business and letting passion drive you. He also touches upon the positive impact mobike has on people’s health other than the obvious convenience it has brought to people’s lives. </itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>In this episode, we have invited Florian Bohnert, head of global partnerships for Mobike. As an entrepreneur, Florian developed an interest for Asian culture and the East very early on and has been leading Mobike’s global expansion journey, especially in China. He stresses the importance of being in the country where you want to expand your business and letting passion drive you. He also touches upon the positive impact mobike has on people’s health other than the obvious convenience it has brought to people’s lives. </itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>china, innovation, tech, mobike, bikeshare</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
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      <itunes:episode>63</itunes:episode>
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      <title>Navigating the Pitfalls of being an Aspiring Entrepreneur in China with Mike Burns, Founding Partner of Asia Growth Solutions and Executive Coach</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>Running a business is an exciting and rewarding process, but at times, can also be very stressful and fraught with many pitfalls. In this episode, Mike Burns, Founding Partner of Asia Growth Solutions, talks about his experiences as an executive coach, business coach, and strategy consultant in China. He highlights the challenges his clients often encounter and gives crucial advice to leaders of all levels. This includes the importance of having a good support network, the need for strong personal values compatible with business, and the 4 key issues most leaders face! With prior leadership experience at Walmart and General Electric, Mike’s advice is invaluable to all those trying to navigate the difficult task of starting a successful business in China.</p>
<p>Show Notes:<br />
1:53 Introduction of Mike Burns<br />
3:33 What does Mike do<br />
4:12 Adapting to China<br />
5:32 Importance of having a strong network<br />
9:01 Experiences in executive coaching and development<br />
13:14 4 key issues leaders most often face in China<br />
28:05 What Mike is working on right now<br />
29:35 Important advice to startups<br />
33:59 Mike’s contact information</p>
<p>Feel free to leave a comment and start a conversation with us. If you have an ideal guest whom you would like to listen to, please let us know and we'll do our best to realize it.</p>
<p>Many thanks to our host Ryan Shuken, guest Mike Burns, editor David and Geep, organizer Chinaccelerator<br />
and sponsor People Squared. Make sure to check out our website www.chinaccelerator.com</p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Thu, 7 Jun 2018 09:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Chinaccelerator)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Running a business is an exciting and rewarding process, but at times, can also be very stressful and fraught with many pitfalls. In this episode, Mike Burns, Founding Partner of Asia Growth Solutions, talks about his experiences as an executive coach, business coach, and strategy consultant in China. He highlights the challenges his clients often encounter and gives crucial advice to leaders of all levels. This includes the importance of having a good support network, the need for strong personal values compatible with business, and the 4 key issues most leaders face! With prior leadership experience at Walmart and General Electric, Mike’s advice is invaluable to all those trying to navigate the difficult task of starting a successful business in China.</p>
<p>Show Notes:<br />
1:53 Introduction of Mike Burns<br />
3:33 What does Mike do<br />
4:12 Adapting to China<br />
5:32 Importance of having a strong network<br />
9:01 Experiences in executive coaching and development<br />
13:14 4 key issues leaders most often face in China<br />
28:05 What Mike is working on right now<br />
29:35 Important advice to startups<br />
33:59 Mike’s contact information</p>
<p>Feel free to leave a comment and start a conversation with us. If you have an ideal guest whom you would like to listen to, please let us know and we'll do our best to realize it.</p>
<p>Many thanks to our host Ryan Shuken, guest Mike Burns, editor David and Geep, organizer Chinaccelerator<br />
and sponsor People Squared. Make sure to check out our website www.chinaccelerator.com</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>Navigating the Pitfalls of being an Aspiring Entrepreneur in China with Mike Burns, Founding Partner of Asia Growth Solutions and Executive Coach</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Chinaccelerator</itunes:author>
      <itunes:image href="https://image.simplecastcdn.com/images/a0e035/a0e0352f-fcbe-4ea1-813c-f1a09496ed52/30c4ffb7-b258-412c-892a-54a72cc7cc81/3000x3000/1528356978artwork.jpg?aid=rss_feed"/>
      <itunes:duration>00:35:47</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>Running a business is an exciting and rewarding process, but at times, can also be very stressful and fraught with many pitfalls. In this episode, Mike Burns, Founding Partner of Asia Growth Solutions, talks about his experiences as an executive coach, business coach, and strategy consultant in China. He highlights the challenges his clients often encounter and gives crucial advice to leaders of all levels. This includes the importance of having a good support network, the need for strong personal values compatible with business, and the 4 key issues most leaders face! With prior leadership experience at Walmart and General Electric, Mike’s advice is invaluable to all those trying to navigate the difficult task of starting a successful business in China.</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>Running a business is an exciting and rewarding process, but at times, can also be very stressful and fraught with many pitfalls. In this episode, Mike Burns, Founding Partner of Asia Growth Solutions, talks about his experiences as an executive coach, business coach, and strategy consultant in China. He highlights the challenges his clients often encounter and gives crucial advice to leaders of all levels. This includes the importance of having a good support network, the need for strong personal values compatible with business, and the 4 key issues most leaders face! With prior leadership experience at Walmart and General Electric, Mike’s advice is invaluable to all those trying to navigate the difficult task of starting a successful business in China.</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>accelerator, asia growth solutions, vc, values, china, chinaccelerator, executive coaching, leader, sosv, general electric, venture capital, network, mentor, business coaching, coach, walmart, mike burns, strategy consulting, people squared</itunes:keywords>
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      <itunes:episode>62</itunes:episode>
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      <title>Is ICO, the way to go, or too hot for it&apos;s own good. We find out with Miranda Tan, CEO and Founder of Robin 8</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>Blockchain is hot. However, what we do not know is whether ICO is a viable way for entrepreneurs under the dual effects of legal regulations and market booms. Robin8, a data-driven influencer marketing platform utilizing AI and Big data, raised 3.6 million USD and also closed ICO in 6 weeks. Miranda Tan, CEO and Founder of Robin8 joined us to introduce how she developed Robin8 in China, raised money after meeting over 100 investors, and met blockchain in the end.</p>
<p>She shared many factors she considered for the fundraising and ICO. For example, how consistent product and repeated pitch practices helped her to raise ICO in a short time. Not stopping at talking about the positive sides of ICO, she also noticed the drawbacks. Can’t wait to share this episode with you! Click to listen to it!</p>
<p>Show Notes:<br />
01:32 Introduce Miranda Tan and Robin8<br />
02:53 Connection with Chinaccelerator and China<br />
05:53 Develop Robin8 to an influencer search engine in China<br />
08:50 Chinese investors move faster than the western but they invest in certain type of company<br />
11:20 Learn from mistakes while fundraising for your company<br />
14:10 Get values from meetings with investors<br />
14:20 What was the Catalyst to do ICO<br />
21:51 Blockchain is regulated, especially in China.<br />
23:24 Biggest takeaways from doing an ICO in 6 weeks<br />
26:07 How to leverage blockchain when they heavily relied on big data and AI technology<br />
31:30 ICO: positive or negative?<br />
37:00 Work as a female CEO</p>
<p>Feel free to leave a comment and start a conversation with us! If you have an ideal guest whom you would like to listen to, please let us know and we'll do our best to realize it!</p>
<p>Many thanks to our host Ryan Shuken, guest Miranda Tan, editor David and Geep, organizer Chinaccelerator and sponsor People Squared.</p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Wed, 23 May 2018 04:42:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Chinaccelerator)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Blockchain is hot. However, what we do not know is whether ICO is a viable way for entrepreneurs under the dual effects of legal regulations and market booms. Robin8, a data-driven influencer marketing platform utilizing AI and Big data, raised 3.6 million USD and also closed ICO in 6 weeks. Miranda Tan, CEO and Founder of Robin8 joined us to introduce how she developed Robin8 in China, raised money after meeting over 100 investors, and met blockchain in the end.</p>
<p>She shared many factors she considered for the fundraising and ICO. For example, how consistent product and repeated pitch practices helped her to raise ICO in a short time. Not stopping at talking about the positive sides of ICO, she also noticed the drawbacks. Can’t wait to share this episode with you! Click to listen to it!</p>
<p>Show Notes:<br />
01:32 Introduce Miranda Tan and Robin8<br />
02:53 Connection with Chinaccelerator and China<br />
05:53 Develop Robin8 to an influencer search engine in China<br />
08:50 Chinese investors move faster than the western but they invest in certain type of company<br />
11:20 Learn from mistakes while fundraising for your company<br />
14:10 Get values from meetings with investors<br />
14:20 What was the Catalyst to do ICO<br />
21:51 Blockchain is regulated, especially in China.<br />
23:24 Biggest takeaways from doing an ICO in 6 weeks<br />
26:07 How to leverage blockchain when they heavily relied on big data and AI technology<br />
31:30 ICO: positive or negative?<br />
37:00 Work as a female CEO</p>
<p>Feel free to leave a comment and start a conversation with us! If you have an ideal guest whom you would like to listen to, please let us know and we'll do our best to realize it!</p>
<p>Many thanks to our host Ryan Shuken, guest Miranda Tan, editor David and Geep, organizer Chinaccelerator and sponsor People Squared.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>Is ICO, the way to go, or too hot for it&apos;s own good. We find out with Miranda Tan, CEO and Founder of Robin 8</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Chinaccelerator</itunes:author>
      <itunes:image href="https://image.simplecastcdn.com/images/a0e035/a0e0352f-fcbe-4ea1-813c-f1a09496ed52/4c31e010-853d-4a7a-aa7a-bf76dcc01719/3000x3000/1527050848artwork.jpg?aid=rss_feed"/>
      <itunes:duration>00:41:26</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>Blockchain is hot. However, what we do not know is whether ICO is a viable way for entrepreneurs under the dual effects of legal regulations and market booms. Robin8, a data-driven influencer marketing platform utilizing AI and Big data, raised 3.6 million USD and also closed ICO in 6 weeks. Miranda Tan, CEO and Founder of Robin8 joined us to introduce how she developed Robin8 in China, raised money after meeting over 100 investors, and met blockchain in the end. 

She shared many factors she considered for the fundraising and ICO. For example, how consistent product and repeated pitch practices helped her to raise ICO in a short time. Not stopping at talking about the positive sides of ICO, she also noticed the drawbacks. Can’t wait to share this episode with you! Click to listen to it!</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>Blockchain is hot. However, what we do not know is whether ICO is a viable way for entrepreneurs under the dual effects of legal regulations and market booms. Robin8, a data-driven influencer marketing platform utilizing AI and Big data, raised 3.6 million USD and also closed ICO in 6 weeks. Miranda Tan, CEO and Founder of Robin8 joined us to introduce how she developed Robin8 in China, raised money after meeting over 100 investors, and met blockchain in the end. 

She shared many factors she considered for the fundraising and ICO. For example, how consistent product and repeated pitch practices helped her to raise ICO in a short time. Not stopping at talking about the positive sides of ICO, she also noticed the drawbacks. Can’t wait to share this episode with you! Click to listen to it!</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>big data, marketing, robin8, influencer, fundraising, china, kol, chinaccelerator, sosv, ai, ico, blockchain, female entrepreneur</itunes:keywords>
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      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:episode>61</itunes:episode>
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      <title>Why RISE has helped break down social barriers with Casey Lau, Co-host for the largest tech conference in Asia.</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>In this episode, we have invited Casey Lau, Co-host for the largest tech conference in Asia - RISE.<br />
Unlike traditional conferences, RISE has helped break down social barriers not only by its highly intellectual talks, but also by a lot of workshops, drinking, networking events. Casey talked about how RISE has developed as the world class conference in Asia. More interestingly, he analysed the trends he has observed in Silicon Valley versus China and compared their different approaches to innovation. &quot;China is gonna innovate faster due to necessity and the West takes a while to have that traction&quot; Casey mentioned.</p>
<p>0:38: Casey Lau intro<br />
9:55:  Growing community and maintain quality<br />
18:30: Trends in innovation</p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Thu, 17 May 2018 12:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Chinaccelerator)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>In this episode, we have invited Casey Lau, Co-host for the largest tech conference in Asia - RISE.<br />
Unlike traditional conferences, RISE has helped break down social barriers not only by its highly intellectual talks, but also by a lot of workshops, drinking, networking events. Casey talked about how RISE has developed as the world class conference in Asia. More interestingly, he analysed the trends he has observed in Silicon Valley versus China and compared their different approaches to innovation. &quot;China is gonna innovate faster due to necessity and the West takes a while to have that traction&quot; Casey mentioned.</p>
<p>0:38: Casey Lau intro<br />
9:55:  Growing community and maintain quality<br />
18:30: Trends in innovation</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>Why RISE has helped break down social barriers with Casey Lau, Co-host for the largest tech conference in Asia.</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Chinaccelerator</itunes:author>
      <itunes:image href="https://image.simplecastcdn.com/images/a0e035/a0e0352f-fcbe-4ea1-813c-f1a09496ed52/3ac08b15-d0fa-448d-aa81-a4542d50cd91/3000x3000/1526561028artwork.jpg?aid=rss_feed"/>
      <itunes:duration>00:30:42</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>In this episode, we have invited Casey Lau, Co-host for the largest tech conference in Asia - RISE. 
Unlike traditional conferences, RISE has helped break down social barriers not only by its highly intellectual talks, but also by a lot of workshops, drinking, networking events. Casey talked about how RISE has developed as the world class conference in Asia. More interestingly, he analysed the trends he has observed in Silicon Valley versus China and compared their different approaches to innovation.  </itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>In this episode, we have invited Casey Lau, Co-host for the largest tech conference in Asia - RISE. 
Unlike traditional conferences, RISE has helped break down social barriers not only by its highly intellectual talks, but also by a lot of workshops, drinking, networking events. Casey talked about how RISE has developed as the world class conference in Asia. More interestingly, he analysed the trends he has observed in Silicon Valley versus China and compared their different approaches to innovation.  </itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
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      <title>Connecting 1 million entrepreneurs all over the world; with Jan Smejkal, China &amp; APAC Community Director of Startup Grind</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>Aiming to build diverse culture and mindset in the whole ecosystem, Jan manages Startup Grind China &amp; APAC as the Community Director. Startup Grind is the world's largest entrepreneurship community connecting more than 1 Million entrepreneurs in over 365 cities, among which over 80 cities are in China. In this episode, Jan shares how Startup Grind China grew up to a successful program, his focus in managing community and most importantly, his perspective on opportunities for startups and investments in China. Can't wait to listen to it! Cheers!</p>
<p>Show notes:<br />
02:42 Introducing Jan<br />
03:54 What brought Jan to China<br />
08:47 What's Jan's first experience with Startup Grind and How he became the Community Director<br />
11:20 How was the community when Jan joined<br />
15:10 Jan's focus of managing the community<br />
18:04 In terms of having people help you in the community, what's the difference between what Startup Grind does in Silicon Valley and that in China?<br />
23:48 What's the next step of Startup Grind?<br />
25:32 Which city will Jan stay? Shanghai, Beijing, Shenzhen...<br />
26:26 The opportunities in China are better?<br />
27:50 How to contact Jan</p>
<p>Feel free to leave a comment and start a conversation with us! If you have an ideal guest whom you would like to listen to, please let us know and we'll do our best to realize it!</p>
<p>Many thanks to our host Ryan Shuken, guest Jan Smejkal, editor David and Geep, organizer Chinaccelerator and sponsor People Squared.</p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Wed, 9 May 2018 09:08:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Chinaccelerator)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Aiming to build diverse culture and mindset in the whole ecosystem, Jan manages Startup Grind China &amp; APAC as the Community Director. Startup Grind is the world's largest entrepreneurship community connecting more than 1 Million entrepreneurs in over 365 cities, among which over 80 cities are in China. In this episode, Jan shares how Startup Grind China grew up to a successful program, his focus in managing community and most importantly, his perspective on opportunities for startups and investments in China. Can't wait to listen to it! Cheers!</p>
<p>Show notes:<br />
02:42 Introducing Jan<br />
03:54 What brought Jan to China<br />
08:47 What's Jan's first experience with Startup Grind and How he became the Community Director<br />
11:20 How was the community when Jan joined<br />
15:10 Jan's focus of managing the community<br />
18:04 In terms of having people help you in the community, what's the difference between what Startup Grind does in Silicon Valley and that in China?<br />
23:48 What's the next step of Startup Grind?<br />
25:32 Which city will Jan stay? Shanghai, Beijing, Shenzhen...<br />
26:26 The opportunities in China are better?<br />
27:50 How to contact Jan</p>
<p>Feel free to leave a comment and start a conversation with us! If you have an ideal guest whom you would like to listen to, please let us know and we'll do our best to realize it!</p>
<p>Many thanks to our host Ryan Shuken, guest Jan Smejkal, editor David and Geep, organizer Chinaccelerator and sponsor People Squared.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>Connecting 1 million entrepreneurs all over the world; with Jan Smejkal, China &amp; APAC Community Director of Startup Grind</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Chinaccelerator</itunes:author>
      <itunes:image href="https://image.simplecastcdn.com/images/a0e035/a0e0352f-fcbe-4ea1-813c-f1a09496ed52/3feff4c0-920c-43f7-b444-cee12974db62/3000x3000/1525859357artwork.jpg?aid=rss_feed"/>
      <itunes:duration>00:30:28</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>Aiming to build diverse culture and mindset in the whole ecosystem, Jan manages Startup Grind China &amp; APAC as the Community Director. Startup Grind is the world&apos;s largest entrepreneurship community connecting more than 1 million entrepreneurs in over 365 cities, among which over 80 cities are in China. In this episode, Jan shares how Startup Grind China grew up to a successful program, his focus in managing community and most importantly, his perspective on opportunities for startups and investments in China. Can&apos;t wait to listen to it! Cheers!</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>Aiming to build diverse culture and mindset in the whole ecosystem, Jan manages Startup Grind China &amp; APAC as the Community Director. Startup Grind is the world&apos;s largest entrepreneurship community connecting more than 1 million entrepreneurs in over 365 cities, among which over 80 cities are in China. In this episode, Jan shares how Startup Grind China grew up to a successful program, his focus in managing community and most importantly, his perspective on opportunities for startups and investments in China. Can&apos;t wait to listen to it! Cheers!</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>accelerator, jan smejkal, china, chinaccelerator, community, corporate innovation, startup, venture capital, innovation, startup grind, shanghai</itunes:keywords>
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      <title>How to build a Star Trek team with Alan Clayton, Roaming mentor of SOSV</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>Are you struggling to form a team and curious what influence team dynamics?<br />
Alan Clayton, roaming mentor of SOSV took us through a journey on team building, diversity and people development. Having worked with over 700 startups analysing the relationship between founders and how a diverse set of founders attribute to the future success of the company, Alan provided us some deep insights into the important elements on building and maintaining a functioning team.</p>
<p>Feel free to leave a comment and start a conversation with us! If you have an ideal guest whom you would like to listen to, please let us know and we'll do our best to realize it!</p>
<p>Many thanks to our special host Oscar Ramos and Ryan Shuken, our awesome roaming mentor Alan Clayton, editor David and Geep, organizer Chinaccelerator and sponsor People Squared.</p>
<p>0:25 Alan Clayton Intro<br />
1:54 roaming mentor<br />
7:40 Diversity Matters<br />
11:45 HBDI</p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Wed, 2 May 2018 15:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Chinaccelerator)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Are you struggling to form a team and curious what influence team dynamics?<br />
Alan Clayton, roaming mentor of SOSV took us through a journey on team building, diversity and people development. Having worked with over 700 startups analysing the relationship between founders and how a diverse set of founders attribute to the future success of the company, Alan provided us some deep insights into the important elements on building and maintaining a functioning team.</p>
<p>Feel free to leave a comment and start a conversation with us! If you have an ideal guest whom you would like to listen to, please let us know and we'll do our best to realize it!</p>
<p>Many thanks to our special host Oscar Ramos and Ryan Shuken, our awesome roaming mentor Alan Clayton, editor David and Geep, organizer Chinaccelerator and sponsor People Squared.</p>
<p>0:25 Alan Clayton Intro<br />
1:54 roaming mentor<br />
7:40 Diversity Matters<br />
11:45 HBDI</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>How to build a Star Trek team with Alan Clayton, Roaming mentor of SOSV</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Chinaccelerator</itunes:author>
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      <itunes:duration>00:30:03</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>Are you struggling to form a team and curious what influence team dynamics?
Alan Clayton, roaming mentor of SOSV took us through a journey on team building, diversity and people development. </itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>Are you struggling to form a team and curious what influence team dynamics?
Alan Clayton, roaming mentor of SOSV took us through a journey on team building, diversity and people development. </itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>diversity, founder, alan clayton, chinaccelerator, oscar ramos, sosv, startup, ryan shuken, team building, hbdi</itunes:keywords>
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      <title>How technology is boosting China&apos;s creativity industry with Steve Wang, Co-Founder and CPO of Tezign特赞</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>The increasing demand of mobile UI/UX and the gradual openness of the society to freelancers have led to the rapid development of China's design and creativity industry. Tezign, as a data-driven design platform, helps companies connect and match designers in different scenarios. In this episode, we invited Tezign's co-founder and chief product officer Steve Wang to share his observations in China's design ecosystem and his judgments on future opportunities. He particularly shared how Tezign, as a bridge between foreign designers and Chinese companies, has promoted the development of creativity ecosystems both at home and abroad.</p>
<p>Show Notes:<br />
02:06 Steve Wang Introduction<br />
02:53 How Tezign started<br />
03:46 17 Million designers in China<br />
04:10 More designers in tech companies<br />
05:56 The improvement of creativity and design in China<br />
07:00 More foreign designers in China<br />
07:28 Utilizing user data to improve the mobile UI/UX<br />
09:58 What's the motivation for foreign designers to work with Chinese clients<br />
13:19 What are the obstacles for those foreign designers in terms of communication and Tezign's solutions<br />
17:11 Leveraging AI technology and human power<br />
18:30 Are there still opportunities in China design community<br />
21:05 Freelancing industry in China is developing but...<br />
22:15 Supply and demand for freelancers in China<br />
24:20 Contact Tezign</p>
<p>Feel free to leave a comment and start a conversation with us! If you have an ideal guest whom you would like to listen to, please let us know and we'll do our best to realize it!</p>
<p>Many thanks to our special host Oscar Ramos and Ryan Shuken, guest Steve Wang, editor David and Geep, organizer Chinaccelerator and sponsor People Squared.</p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Wed, 18 Apr 2018 04:32:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Chinaccelerator)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The increasing demand of mobile UI/UX and the gradual openness of the society to freelancers have led to the rapid development of China's design and creativity industry. Tezign, as a data-driven design platform, helps companies connect and match designers in different scenarios. In this episode, we invited Tezign's co-founder and chief product officer Steve Wang to share his observations in China's design ecosystem and his judgments on future opportunities. He particularly shared how Tezign, as a bridge between foreign designers and Chinese companies, has promoted the development of creativity ecosystems both at home and abroad.</p>
<p>Show Notes:<br />
02:06 Steve Wang Introduction<br />
02:53 How Tezign started<br />
03:46 17 Million designers in China<br />
04:10 More designers in tech companies<br />
05:56 The improvement of creativity and design in China<br />
07:00 More foreign designers in China<br />
07:28 Utilizing user data to improve the mobile UI/UX<br />
09:58 What's the motivation for foreign designers to work with Chinese clients<br />
13:19 What are the obstacles for those foreign designers in terms of communication and Tezign's solutions<br />
17:11 Leveraging AI technology and human power<br />
18:30 Are there still opportunities in China design community<br />
21:05 Freelancing industry in China is developing but...<br />
22:15 Supply and demand for freelancers in China<br />
24:20 Contact Tezign</p>
<p>Feel free to leave a comment and start a conversation with us! If you have an ideal guest whom you would like to listen to, please let us know and we'll do our best to realize it!</p>
<p>Many thanks to our special host Oscar Ramos and Ryan Shuken, guest Steve Wang, editor David and Geep, organizer Chinaccelerator and sponsor People Squared.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>How technology is boosting China&apos;s creativity industry with Steve Wang, Co-Founder and CPO of Tezign特赞</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Chinaccelerator</itunes:author>
      <itunes:image href="https://image.simplecastcdn.com/images/a0e035/a0e0352f-fcbe-4ea1-813c-f1a09496ed52/e093ba6b-2bdb-4cb5-aaa7-fc1cccbeefda/3000x3000/1524026313artwork.jpg?aid=rss_feed"/>
      <itunes:duration>00:25:49</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>The increasing demand of mobile UI/UX and the gradual openness of the society to freelancers have led to the rapid development of China&apos;s design and creativity industry. Tezign, as a data-driven design platform, helps companies connect and match designers in different scenarios. In this episode, we invited Tezign&apos;s co-founder and chief product officer Steve Wang to share his observations in China&apos;s design ecosystem and his judgments on future opportunities. He particularly shared how Tezign, as a bridge between foreign designers and Chinese companies, has promoted the development of creativity ecosystems both at home and abroad.</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>The increasing demand of mobile UI/UX and the gradual openness of the society to freelancers have led to the rapid development of China&apos;s design and creativity industry. Tezign, as a data-driven design platform, helps companies connect and match designers in different scenarios. In this episode, we invited Tezign&apos;s co-founder and chief product officer Steve Wang to share his observations in China&apos;s design ecosystem and his judgments on future opportunities. He particularly shared how Tezign, as a bridge between foreign designers and Chinese companies, has promoted the development of creativity ecosystems both at home and abroad.</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>accelerator, designer, china, chinaccelerator, sosv, venture capital, innovation, design, shanghai, creativity</itunes:keywords>
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      <title>In the eyes of 3 foreigners, China&apos;s great changes in the past decade; with Kapil Kane, Geoffrey Handley and Oscar Ramos</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>When you ask foreigners why they come to China to start a business, many people will say that because the Chinese market is very large and they marvel at China speed. But the key to the problem is not what brought you to China, but why you have stayed in China for so long. Today we have a special podcast with 3 &quot;Laowai&quot; guests who have been in China for over 10 years and are respectively leading the frontiers of venture capital accelerator, corporate innovation and entrepreneurship in Shanghai. They stated that compared to other cities, Shanghai is so different and crazy. From their mouths, you will hear China's great changes in the past decade in the eyes of foreigners. Let's listen to it!</p>
<p>Host: Graham Brown, Host of Asia Tech Podcast<br />
Guests: Oscar Ramos, Chinaccelerator Partner and Program Director<br />
Kapil Kane, Director of Innovation at Intel<br />
Geoffrey Handley, Founding General Partner of Haitao Capital</p>
<p>Show notes:<br />
01:45 Introdcution<br />
02:33 Why Oscar came to Shanghai<br />
04:00 Shenzhen VS Shanghai<br />
05:54 How was Shanghai before 2008 Olympics<br />
09:28 Kapil's first arrival in China<br />
13:33 Why did you stay in China<br />
16:35 Do engineers think of technology differently after they come to China<br />
18:09 Mobile revolution in China<br />
18:38 What makes Shanghai startup ecosystem special - Being open-minded<br />
21:15 Easy access to everyone in this ecosystem<br />
23:00 Geoffrey joined the chat<br />
25:12 Geoffrey's connection with China<br />
27:09 Is this a good place for technology development</p>
<p>Feel free to leave a comment and start a conversation with us! If you have an ideal guest whom you would like to listen to, please let us know and we'll do our best to realize it!</p>
<p>Many thanks to our special host Graham Brown, guest Oscar Ramos, Kapil Kane and Geoffrey Handley, editor David and Geep, organizer Chinaccelerator and sponsor People Squared.</p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Wed, 11 Apr 2018 05:30:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Chinaccelerator)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>When you ask foreigners why they come to China to start a business, many people will say that because the Chinese market is very large and they marvel at China speed. But the key to the problem is not what brought you to China, but why you have stayed in China for so long. Today we have a special podcast with 3 &quot;Laowai&quot; guests who have been in China for over 10 years and are respectively leading the frontiers of venture capital accelerator, corporate innovation and entrepreneurship in Shanghai. They stated that compared to other cities, Shanghai is so different and crazy. From their mouths, you will hear China's great changes in the past decade in the eyes of foreigners. Let's listen to it!</p>
<p>Host: Graham Brown, Host of Asia Tech Podcast<br />
Guests: Oscar Ramos, Chinaccelerator Partner and Program Director<br />
Kapil Kane, Director of Innovation at Intel<br />
Geoffrey Handley, Founding General Partner of Haitao Capital</p>
<p>Show notes:<br />
01:45 Introdcution<br />
02:33 Why Oscar came to Shanghai<br />
04:00 Shenzhen VS Shanghai<br />
05:54 How was Shanghai before 2008 Olympics<br />
09:28 Kapil's first arrival in China<br />
13:33 Why did you stay in China<br />
16:35 Do engineers think of technology differently after they come to China<br />
18:09 Mobile revolution in China<br />
18:38 What makes Shanghai startup ecosystem special - Being open-minded<br />
21:15 Easy access to everyone in this ecosystem<br />
23:00 Geoffrey joined the chat<br />
25:12 Geoffrey's connection with China<br />
27:09 Is this a good place for technology development</p>
<p>Feel free to leave a comment and start a conversation with us! If you have an ideal guest whom you would like to listen to, please let us know and we'll do our best to realize it!</p>
<p>Many thanks to our special host Graham Brown, guest Oscar Ramos, Kapil Kane and Geoffrey Handley, editor David and Geep, organizer Chinaccelerator and sponsor People Squared.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>In the eyes of 3 foreigners, China&apos;s great changes in the past decade; with Kapil Kane, Geoffrey Handley and Oscar Ramos</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Chinaccelerator</itunes:author>
      <itunes:image href="https://image.simplecastcdn.com/images/a0e035/a0e0352f-fcbe-4ea1-813c-f1a09496ed52/c53c163f-2fa6-486e-a733-262833eec934/3000x3000/1523426040artwork.jpg?aid=rss_feed"/>
      <itunes:duration>00:29:35</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>When you ask foreigners why they come to China to start a business, many people will say that because the Chinese market is very large and they marvel at China speed. But the key to the problem is not what brought you to China, but why you have stayed in China for so long. Today we have a special podcast with 3 &quot;Laowai&quot; guests who have been in China for over 10 years and are respectively leading the frontiers of venture capital accelerator, corporate innovation and entrepreneurship in Shanghai. From their mouths, you will hear China&apos;s great changes in the past decade in the eyes of foreigners. Let&apos;s listen to it!

Host: Graham Brown, Host of Asia Tech Podcast
Guests: Oscar Ramos, Chinaccelerator Partner and Program Director  
                Kapil Kane, Director of Innovation at Intel 
                Geoffrey Handley, Founding General Partner of Haitao Capital</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>When you ask foreigners why they come to China to start a business, many people will say that because the Chinese market is very large and they marvel at China speed. But the key to the problem is not what brought you to China, but why you have stayed in China for so long. Today we have a special podcast with 3 &quot;Laowai&quot; guests who have been in China for over 10 years and are respectively leading the frontiers of venture capital accelerator, corporate innovation and entrepreneurship in Shanghai. From their mouths, you will hear China&apos;s great changes in the past decade in the eyes of foreigners. Let&apos;s listen to it!

Host: Graham Brown, Host of Asia Tech Podcast
Guests: Oscar Ramos, Chinaccelerator Partner and Program Director  
                Kapil Kane, Director of Innovation at Intel 
                Geoffrey Handley, Founding General Partner of Haitao Capital</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>accelerator, entrepreneurship, china, chinaccelerator, corporate innovation, venture capital, innovation, entrepreneurs, shanghai</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
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      <itunes:episode>56</itunes:episode>
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      <title>Creating a perfect marriage between food and technology with Kevin Yu, CEO of Sidechef, a serial tech entrepreneur and a three-time TEDx speaker</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>With more than 8 years of experience at the world’s leading gaming companies, Kevin Yu decided to stay in China and build Sidechef, “Netflix for recipes” after his first startup exit. Realizing people’s passion for food and cooking, Kevin is determined to unlock the inner potential of people and used the lessons from gaming industry to food industry. In this episode, Kevin shared many interesting insights on building a team, fundraising and building investor relations in China, and elaborated on the simple idea of never give up.</p>
<p>Show notes:<br />
0:30 - 2:57  Kevin Yu Introduction<br />
3:00 - 4:19  Building a team<br />
4:54 - 6:32  Pivot to food industry<br />
10:50 - 12:13 Team rotation<br />
12:40 - 17:13 Fundraising and building relationships<br />
22:42 - 26:38 marriage between food and tech<br />
26:47 - 26:50 Connect with Kevin Yu</p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Wed, 4 Apr 2018 03:20:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Chinaccelerator)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>With more than 8 years of experience at the world’s leading gaming companies, Kevin Yu decided to stay in China and build Sidechef, “Netflix for recipes” after his first startup exit. Realizing people’s passion for food and cooking, Kevin is determined to unlock the inner potential of people and used the lessons from gaming industry to food industry. In this episode, Kevin shared many interesting insights on building a team, fundraising and building investor relations in China, and elaborated on the simple idea of never give up.</p>
<p>Show notes:<br />
0:30 - 2:57  Kevin Yu Introduction<br />
3:00 - 4:19  Building a team<br />
4:54 - 6:32  Pivot to food industry<br />
10:50 - 12:13 Team rotation<br />
12:40 - 17:13 Fundraising and building relationships<br />
22:42 - 26:38 marriage between food and tech<br />
26:47 - 26:50 Connect with Kevin Yu</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>Creating a perfect marriage between food and technology with Kevin Yu, CEO of Sidechef, a serial tech entrepreneur and a three-time TEDx speaker</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Chinaccelerator</itunes:author>
      <itunes:image href="https://image.simplecastcdn.com/images/a0e035/a0e0352f-fcbe-4ea1-813c-f1a09496ed52/f7f65ad3-0ae2-42f3-9add-c60f7dec8bda/3000x3000/1522812731artwork.jpg?aid=rss_feed"/>
      <itunes:duration>00:28:30</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>With more than 8 years of experience at the world’s leading gaming companies, Kevin Yu decided to stay in China and build Sidechef, “Netflix for recipes” after his first startup exit. Realizing people’s passion for food and cooking, Kevin is determined to unlock the inner potential of people and used the lessons from gaming industry to food industry.</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>With more than 8 years of experience at the world’s leading gaming companies, Kevin Yu decided to stay in China and build Sidechef, “Netflix for recipes” after his first startup exit. Realizing people’s passion for food and cooking, Kevin is determined to unlock the inner potential of people and used the lessons from gaming industry to food industry.</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>kevin yu, ted-x speaker, team, food, fundraise, investor, sidechef, games, technology, sosv, recipe, startup, entrepreneur, chinacclerator, relationship, teamwork, cooking</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
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      <itunes:episode>55</itunes:episode>
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      <title>Exploring the future of working, learning and living; with Fei Yao, Co-Founder &amp; COO of QLC</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>With 11 team members working and living in 5 different cities, Fei Yao and her company QLC are redefining working, learning and living. After leaving a traditionally successful career path as a management consultant, Fei founded the remote internship platform QLC. In this episode, she shares her view of the growing demand of people changing their jobs, and advocates the idea of lifelong learning and co-living.</p>
<p>Show Notes:<br />
01:46 From a traditional career path to her first startup<br />
07:08 Changing from online furniture to redifining the future of work<br />
10:01 The startup ecosystem in Shanghai<br />
12:11 Why people need the future of work globally<br />
17:21 How the way we learn is changing and the future of education<br />
18:54 Lifelong learning to keep you refreshed<br />
21:47 Learning through QLC<br />
22:34 Working with Uber and Linkedin<br />
24:11 The example of the future of living<br />
29:00 Contact QLC</p>
<p>Feel free to leave a comment and start a conversation with us! If you have an ideal guest whom you would like to listen to, please let us know and we'll do our best to realize it!</p>
<p>Many thanks to our special guest Fei Yao, host Oscar Ramos, editor David and Geep, organizer Chinaccelerator and sponsor People Squared.</p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Wed, 14 Mar 2018 03:15:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Chinaccelerator)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>With 11 team members working and living in 5 different cities, Fei Yao and her company QLC are redefining working, learning and living. After leaving a traditionally successful career path as a management consultant, Fei founded the remote internship platform QLC. In this episode, she shares her view of the growing demand of people changing their jobs, and advocates the idea of lifelong learning and co-living.</p>
<p>Show Notes:<br />
01:46 From a traditional career path to her first startup<br />
07:08 Changing from online furniture to redifining the future of work<br />
10:01 The startup ecosystem in Shanghai<br />
12:11 Why people need the future of work globally<br />
17:21 How the way we learn is changing and the future of education<br />
18:54 Lifelong learning to keep you refreshed<br />
21:47 Learning through QLC<br />
22:34 Working with Uber and Linkedin<br />
24:11 The example of the future of living<br />
29:00 Contact QLC</p>
<p>Feel free to leave a comment and start a conversation with us! If you have an ideal guest whom you would like to listen to, please let us know and we'll do our best to realize it!</p>
<p>Many thanks to our special guest Fei Yao, host Oscar Ramos, editor David and Geep, organizer Chinaccelerator and sponsor People Squared.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>Exploring the future of working, learning and living; with Fei Yao, Co-Founder &amp; COO of QLC</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Chinaccelerator</itunes:author>
      <itunes:image href="https://image.simplecastcdn.com/images/a0e035/a0e0352f-fcbe-4ea1-813c-f1a09496ed52/7a436d40-1fb8-4001-85cb-21d0c59cdaa6/3000x3000/1520998248artwork.jpg?aid=rss_feed"/>
      <itunes:duration>00:30:11</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>With 11 team members working and living in 5 different cities, Fei Yao and her company QLC are redefining working, learning and living. After leaving a traditionally successful career path as a management consultant, Fei founded the remote internship platform QLC. In this episode, she shares her view of the growing demand of people changing their jobs, and advocates the idea of lifelong learning and co-living.</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>With 11 team members working and living in 5 different cities, Fei Yao and her company QLC are redefining working, learning and living. After leaving a traditionally successful career path as a management consultant, Fei founded the remote internship platform QLC. In this episode, she shares her view of the growing demand of people changing their jobs, and advocates the idea of lifelong learning and co-living.</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>co-living, future of work, remote internship, china, singapore, chinaccelerator, oscar ramos, co-learning, fei yao, startup, qlc, entrepreneur, will fan, lifelong learning, shanghai, australia</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:episode>54</itunes:episode>
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      <title>Driving the next 100 years of Innovation in China with Brian Tam, Founder of Let’s Make Great, a 3x Tedx speaker and creator of PROTO innovation cards</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>“Entrepreneurship helps me to define who I am,” says Brian Tam, the founder of a creative and innovation consultancy named Let’s Make Great. Realising the need for creative thinking and innovation in China, Brian shared with us how he started his self discovery adventure in China and later catalysed his ideas into creating “Let’s Make Great”. He also touched upon how innovation in China has involved, the changing perceptions of innovation in China and his take on how to approach it.<br />
Aspiring to sparkle the creative spirits in more people, Brian has helped many corporations to find the right mechanism to be creative.</p>
<p>Show Notes:<br />
1:43 Brian Tam introduction<br />
6:43 What brings Brian to China<br />
9:38 Coming to China with a strategy and vision to be more creative<br />
14:08 The importance of team dynamic<br />
16:40 How Innovation in China has evolved<br />
21:53 When innovation meets corporations<br />
25:21 The right mechanism for creativity<br />
30:18 Changing perception of innovation in China<br />
33:27 PROTO and how to connect with Brian</p>
<p>Feel free to leave a comment and start a conversation with us! If you have an ideal guest whom you would like to listen to, please let us know and we'll do our best to realize it!<br />
Many thanks to our guest Brian Tam, host Oscar Ramos, editor David and Geep, and sponsor People Squared.</p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Wed, 7 Mar 2018 05:44:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Chinaccelerator)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>“Entrepreneurship helps me to define who I am,” says Brian Tam, the founder of a creative and innovation consultancy named Let’s Make Great. Realising the need for creative thinking and innovation in China, Brian shared with us how he started his self discovery adventure in China and later catalysed his ideas into creating “Let’s Make Great”. He also touched upon how innovation in China has involved, the changing perceptions of innovation in China and his take on how to approach it.<br />
Aspiring to sparkle the creative spirits in more people, Brian has helped many corporations to find the right mechanism to be creative.</p>
<p>Show Notes:<br />
1:43 Brian Tam introduction<br />
6:43 What brings Brian to China<br />
9:38 Coming to China with a strategy and vision to be more creative<br />
14:08 The importance of team dynamic<br />
16:40 How Innovation in China has evolved<br />
21:53 When innovation meets corporations<br />
25:21 The right mechanism for creativity<br />
30:18 Changing perception of innovation in China<br />
33:27 PROTO and how to connect with Brian</p>
<p>Feel free to leave a comment and start a conversation with us! If you have an ideal guest whom you would like to listen to, please let us know and we'll do our best to realize it!<br />
Many thanks to our guest Brian Tam, host Oscar Ramos, editor David and Geep, and sponsor People Squared.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>Driving the next 100 years of Innovation in China with Brian Tam, Founder of Let’s Make Great, a 3x Tedx speaker and creator of PROTO innovation cards</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Chinaccelerator</itunes:author>
      <itunes:image href="https://image.simplecastcdn.com/images/a0e035/a0e0352f-fcbe-4ea1-813c-f1a09496ed52/2effe72c-e6c6-48bb-b4e2-5dee53fa9a71/3000x3000/1520403490artwork.jpg?aid=rss_feed"/>
      <itunes:duration>00:34:53</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>“Entrepreneurship helps me to define who I am,” says Brian Tam, the founder of a creative and innovation consultancy named Let’s Make Great. Realising the need for creative thinking and innovation in China, Brian shared with us how he started his self discovery adventure in China and later catalysed his ideas into creating “Let’s Make Great”. He also touched upon how innovation in China has involved, the changing perceptions of innovation in China and his take on how to approach it.
</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>“Entrepreneurship helps me to define who I am,” says Brian Tam, the founder of a creative and innovation consultancy named Let’s Make Great. Realising the need for creative thinking and innovation in China, Brian shared with us how he started his self discovery adventure in China and later catalysed his ideas into creating “Let’s Make Great”. He also touched upon how innovation in China has involved, the changing perceptions of innovation in China and his take on how to approach it.
</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>proto, let&apos;s make great, entrepreneurship, creation, chinaccelerator, sosv, innovation, entrepreneurs, shanghai, creative, leadership</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:episode>53</itunes:episode>
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      <title>A stepping stone to &quot;maturalize&quot; your ideas before accelerators; with Albert Liang, Founder and CEO of IGENESIIS Group</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>Venture Capital tends to shut the door if you don't have a team, a product and some customers due to too many risks. Increasingly, entrepreneurs in China with just an idea are having difficulty in getting money and help. Focused on the ideation stage before accelerators and incubators, Albert Liang, CEO and Founder of IGENESIIS, is dedicated to inspiring people to become founders through a 4-month process with their mentor community and courses on skills, resilience, and core values.</p>
<p>Ideation programs is an emerging trend around the world, especially in Silicon Valley. Having started the first ideation program in China, Albert has many incredible insights about how to &quot;maturalize&quot; your idea into a business in Chinese market. As a serial entrepreneur, Albert also has prospective insights about why the current environment is ready for IGENESIIS and how investors are likely to respond to this opportunity.</p>
<p>Show Notes: Jump ahead to topics<br />
02:08 Albert Liang Introduction<br />
04:34 What IGENSIIS is and how to &quot;maturalize&quot; your idea into a business<br />
06:23 Why the environment is ready for IGENSIIS<br />
08:23 Face the risky world and start the stepping stone program<br />
10:08 Why Stared IGENSIIS<br />
11:15 Ideation is an emerging trend all over the world<br />
15:44 Hopes for the Ideation Program<br />
25:06 How investors will react<br />
25:52 Suggestions<br />
27:08 Contact IGENSIIS</p>
<p>Feel free to leave a comment and start a conversation with us! If you have an ideal guest whom you would like to listen to, please let us know and we'll do our best to realize it!</p>
<p>Many thanks to our special guest Albert Liang, host Ryan Shuken, editor David and Geep, and sponsor People Squared.</p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Wed, 28 Feb 2018 03:06:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Chinaccelerator)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Venture Capital tends to shut the door if you don't have a team, a product and some customers due to too many risks. Increasingly, entrepreneurs in China with just an idea are having difficulty in getting money and help. Focused on the ideation stage before accelerators and incubators, Albert Liang, CEO and Founder of IGENESIIS, is dedicated to inspiring people to become founders through a 4-month process with their mentor community and courses on skills, resilience, and core values.</p>
<p>Ideation programs is an emerging trend around the world, especially in Silicon Valley. Having started the first ideation program in China, Albert has many incredible insights about how to &quot;maturalize&quot; your idea into a business in Chinese market. As a serial entrepreneur, Albert also has prospective insights about why the current environment is ready for IGENESIIS and how investors are likely to respond to this opportunity.</p>
<p>Show Notes: Jump ahead to topics<br />
02:08 Albert Liang Introduction<br />
04:34 What IGENSIIS is and how to &quot;maturalize&quot; your idea into a business<br />
06:23 Why the environment is ready for IGENSIIS<br />
08:23 Face the risky world and start the stepping stone program<br />
10:08 Why Stared IGENSIIS<br />
11:15 Ideation is an emerging trend all over the world<br />
15:44 Hopes for the Ideation Program<br />
25:06 How investors will react<br />
25:52 Suggestions<br />
27:08 Contact IGENSIIS</p>
<p>Feel free to leave a comment and start a conversation with us! If you have an ideal guest whom you would like to listen to, please let us know and we'll do our best to realize it!</p>
<p>Many thanks to our special guest Albert Liang, host Ryan Shuken, editor David and Geep, and sponsor People Squared.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>A stepping stone to &quot;maturalize&quot; your ideas before accelerators; with Albert Liang, Founder and CEO of IGENESIIS Group</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Chinaccelerator</itunes:author>
      <itunes:image href="https://image.simplecastcdn.com/images/a0e035/a0e0352f-fcbe-4ea1-813c-f1a09496ed52/2f4ff07b-b2da-4227-a58a-6835416b57a3/3000x3000/1519788807artwork.jpg?aid=rss_feed"/>
      <itunes:duration>00:28:55</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>Venture Capital tends to shut the door if you don&apos;t have a team, a product and some customers due to too many risks. Increasingly, entrepreneurs in China with just an idea are having difficulty in getting money and help. Focused on the ideation stage before accelerators and incubators, Albert Liang, CEO and Founder of IGENESIIS, is dedicated to inspiring people to become founders through a 4-month process with their mentor community and courses on various skills and core values. As a serial entrepreneur, Albert has prospective insights about why the current environment is already ready for IGENESIIS and what investors will do about this opportunity.</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>Venture Capital tends to shut the door if you don&apos;t have a team, a product and some customers due to too many risks. Increasingly, entrepreneurs in China with just an idea are having difficulty in getting money and help. Focused on the ideation stage before accelerators and incubators, Albert Liang, CEO and Founder of IGENESIIS, is dedicated to inspiring people to become founders through a 4-month process with their mentor community and courses on various skills and core values. As a serial entrepreneur, Albert has prospective insights about why the current environment is already ready for IGENESIIS and what investors will do about this opportunity.</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>ideation, china startup pulse, incubators, china, chinaccelerator, accelerators, sosv, startups, entrepreneurs</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:episode>52</itunes:episode>
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      <title>Why we create a community for women in China with Michelle Li, Founder and CEO of Sorority China</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>When independent, young professional women struggle to find the right network, resources and support, what dilemma are they facing? In this episode, Michelle Li, founder and CEO of Sorority China, the first and one of a kind community and sisterhood in China for independent women, has all the answers. Coming from a single child background and having experienced living in a supportive sisterhood in school, Michelle tells her story on how she started creating a sisterhood for women entrepreneurs, growing mentors and changing the gender dynamic in China.</p>
<p>Michelle empathises with these women in dilemma and also shares with us some good suggestions for female entrepreneurs from her perspective.</p>
<p>Show Notes:<br />
00:15 Introduction of Michelle Li<br />
2:00 How and Why Michelle starts a community for like-minded women<br />
9:40 Difficulties faced as a woman founder<br />
16:50 How did Sorority China become successful<br />
24:09 Thriving in Chinese market<br />
26:50 The Future Ahead</p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Wed, 21 Feb 2018 02:29:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Chinaccelerator)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>When independent, young professional women struggle to find the right network, resources and support, what dilemma are they facing? In this episode, Michelle Li, founder and CEO of Sorority China, the first and one of a kind community and sisterhood in China for independent women, has all the answers. Coming from a single child background and having experienced living in a supportive sisterhood in school, Michelle tells her story on how she started creating a sisterhood for women entrepreneurs, growing mentors and changing the gender dynamic in China.</p>
<p>Michelle empathises with these women in dilemma and also shares with us some good suggestions for female entrepreneurs from her perspective.</p>
<p>Show Notes:<br />
00:15 Introduction of Michelle Li<br />
2:00 How and Why Michelle starts a community for like-minded women<br />
9:40 Difficulties faced as a woman founder<br />
16:50 How did Sorority China become successful<br />
24:09 Thriving in Chinese market<br />
26:50 The Future Ahead</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>Why we create a community for women in China with Michelle Li, Founder and CEO of Sorority China</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Chinaccelerator</itunes:author>
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      <itunes:duration>00:33:04</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>When young, independent professional women struggle to find the right network, resources and support, what dilemma are they facing? In this episode, Michelle Li, founder and CEO of Sorority China, has all the answers. Coming from a single child background and having experienced living in a supportive sisterhood in school, Michelle tells her story on how she started creating a sisterhood for women entrepreneurs, growing mentors and changing the gender dynamic in China. 
</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>When young, independent professional women struggle to find the right network, resources and support, what dilemma are they facing? In this episode, Michelle Li, founder and CEO of Sorority China, has all the answers. Coming from a single child background and having experienced living in a supportive sisterhood in school, Michelle tells her story on how she started creating a sisterhood for women entrepreneurs, growing mentors and changing the gender dynamic in China. 
</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>sisterhood, single child, china startup pulse, sorority china, china, chinaccelerator, sosv, startup, co-working space, female entrepreneur</itunes:keywords>
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      <title>One startup, one voice and a huge market! Today we talk about Health Insurtech in China with Sébastien Gaudin, CEO and Co-Founder of the CareVoice</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>When trust has become the biggest issue in the Chinese healthcare market, how do you tackle the market and rebuild trust? In this latest episode, Sébastien Gaudin, CEO and Co-Founder of the CareVoice shared with us his experience tackling one of the biggest market in China - healthcare. His solution, “trip advisor” for healthcare, helps bring private healthcare trust and a sense of peace of mind with very simple ideas.</p>
<p>Recently raised 2M to bring its cost, quality transparency app to China, Sébastien Gaudin tells his story on how he started tackling healthcare business in China, rebuilds trust and pivots when needed.</p>
<p>Show Notes:<br />
0:23 Sébastien Gaudin Introduction<br />
2:40 How Sébastien started the CareVoice<br />
2:54 Trust as the biggest issue<br />
5:28 Time to Pivot<br />
12:34 Having a Chinese Co-Founder<br />
25:26 Next Step for the CareVoice</p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Wed, 14 Feb 2018 03:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Chinaccelerator)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>When trust has become the biggest issue in the Chinese healthcare market, how do you tackle the market and rebuild trust? In this latest episode, Sébastien Gaudin, CEO and Co-Founder of the CareVoice shared with us his experience tackling one of the biggest market in China - healthcare. His solution, “trip advisor” for healthcare, helps bring private healthcare trust and a sense of peace of mind with very simple ideas.</p>
<p>Recently raised 2M to bring its cost, quality transparency app to China, Sébastien Gaudin tells his story on how he started tackling healthcare business in China, rebuilds trust and pivots when needed.</p>
<p>Show Notes:<br />
0:23 Sébastien Gaudin Introduction<br />
2:40 How Sébastien started the CareVoice<br />
2:54 Trust as the biggest issue<br />
5:28 Time to Pivot<br />
12:34 Having a Chinese Co-Founder<br />
25:26 Next Step for the CareVoice</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>One startup, one voice and a huge market! Today we talk about Health Insurtech in China with Sébastien Gaudin, CEO and Co-Founder of the CareVoice</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Chinaccelerator</itunes:author>
      <itunes:image href="https://image.simplecastcdn.com/images/a0e035/a0e0352f-fcbe-4ea1-813c-f1a09496ed52/6e6c9957-5842-41fb-a005-9fa5edf74595/3000x3000/1518574974artwork.jpg?aid=rss_feed"/>
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      <itunes:subtitle>When trust has become the biggest issue in the Chinese healthcare market, how do you tackle the market and rebuild trust? In this latest episode, Sébastien Gaudin, CEO and Co-Founder of the CareVoice shared with us his experience tackling one of the biggest market in China - healthcare. His solution, “trip advisor” for healthcare, helps bring private healthcare trust and a sense of peace of mind with very simple ideas.</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>china startup pulse, china, healthcare, chinaccelerator, sosv, startups, entrepreneurs, insurance, insuretech</itunes:keywords>
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      <title>How DESIGN helps to validate your business ideas; with Grace Ng, Co-Founder of Lean Startup Machine</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>Assumptions will never become facts untill you validate it. How to validate your idea? Design helps. Grace Ng, Co-Founder of Lean Startup Machine shared how and why she built the Javelin Board and many interesting ideas about optimisation in design needs for questions. As a female entrepreneur, she has also observed how the global scene is opening up to women in technology ecosystem.</p>
<p>When you're focusing on the design, the biggest design challenge is to validate the customer's problem. Grace has really good ideas about how to build your startup and integrate design into what you do, talk to your team, design for success, and make it happen.</p>
<p>Show Notes: Jump ahead to topics<br />
02:24 Grace Ng Introduction<br />
04:18 How Grace started design work in startups<br />
09:35 The framework works effectively in International startups<br />
12:34 Differences between Chinese entrepreneurs and International teams<br />
14:24 More opportunities for female entrepreneurs all over the world<br />
17:39 Drop your ego out of the door<br />
21:14 Become the biggest support for your co-founder<br />
22:06 The next step for Lean Startup Machine Methodology</p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Wed, 7 Feb 2018 02:56:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Chinaccelerator)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Assumptions will never become facts untill you validate it. How to validate your idea? Design helps. Grace Ng, Co-Founder of Lean Startup Machine shared how and why she built the Javelin Board and many interesting ideas about optimisation in design needs for questions. As a female entrepreneur, she has also observed how the global scene is opening up to women in technology ecosystem.</p>
<p>When you're focusing on the design, the biggest design challenge is to validate the customer's problem. Grace has really good ideas about how to build your startup and integrate design into what you do, talk to your team, design for success, and make it happen.</p>
<p>Show Notes: Jump ahead to topics<br />
02:24 Grace Ng Introduction<br />
04:18 How Grace started design work in startups<br />
09:35 The framework works effectively in International startups<br />
12:34 Differences between Chinese entrepreneurs and International teams<br />
14:24 More opportunities for female entrepreneurs all over the world<br />
17:39 Drop your ego out of the door<br />
21:14 Become the biggest support for your co-founder<br />
22:06 The next step for Lean Startup Machine Methodology</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>How DESIGN helps to validate your business ideas; with Grace Ng, Co-Founder of Lean Startup Machine</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Chinaccelerator</itunes:author>
      <itunes:image href="https://image.simplecastcdn.com/images/a0e035/a0e0352f-fcbe-4ea1-813c-f1a09496ed52/58aa3d83-84f7-49b8-82dd-20975d13a2f4/3000x3000/1517973216artwork.jpg?aid=rss_feed"/>
      <itunes:duration>00:26:21</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>Assumptions will never become facts untill you validate it. How to validate your idea? Design helps. Grace Ng, Co-Founder of Lean Startup Machine shared how and why she built the Javelin Board and many interesting ideas about optimisation in design needs for questions. As a female entrepreneur, she has also observed how the global scene is opening up to women in technology ecosystem.</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>Assumptions will never become facts untill you validate it. How to validate your idea? Design helps. Grace Ng, Co-Founder of Lean Startup Machine shared how and why she built the Javelin Board and many interesting ideas about optimisation in design needs for questions. As a female entrepreneur, she has also observed how the global scene is opening up to women in technology ecosystem.</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>china startup pulse, lean startup machine, china, chinaccelerator, sosv, design, startups, entrepreneurs, javelin board</itunes:keywords>
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      <title>Startup like a rolling stone; trailblazing within the China music and event industry with Archie Hamilton founder and CEO of Split Works.</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>Building something that doesn't exist is what some entrepreneurs thrive on. The risk, challenges, and potential drove Archie Hamilton to pioneer an entire industry in China.  Archie Hamilton founder and CEO of Split Works, started in 2006 to help build the music festival industry in China. Realizing that there was no audience here, he started to make up the rules and fought to understand his audience while learning how to survive, and built one of the greatest music festivals in China.</p>
<p>We talk with Archie about what it was like to jump into China, risking it all to build an international music festival scene. Archie talks about how to make up your own rules, be lean, and how the hard lessons of China business made him a better CEO. This is a great episode for the dreamers and believers who want to build their own empire in the East.</p>
<p>Thanks as always to our sponsors Chinaccelerator, People-Squared, and our syndication partner Technode. A huge thanks to our Producer, Vivian Law and Production Editor David Xu, and finally our listeners –Thank You!</p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Mon, 26 Dec 2016 05:40:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Chinaccelerator)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Building something that doesn't exist is what some entrepreneurs thrive on. The risk, challenges, and potential drove Archie Hamilton to pioneer an entire industry in China.  Archie Hamilton founder and CEO of Split Works, started in 2006 to help build the music festival industry in China. Realizing that there was no audience here, he started to make up the rules and fought to understand his audience while learning how to survive, and built one of the greatest music festivals in China.</p>
<p>We talk with Archie about what it was like to jump into China, risking it all to build an international music festival scene. Archie talks about how to make up your own rules, be lean, and how the hard lessons of China business made him a better CEO. This is a great episode for the dreamers and believers who want to build their own empire in the East.</p>
<p>Thanks as always to our sponsors Chinaccelerator, People-Squared, and our syndication partner Technode. A huge thanks to our Producer, Vivian Law and Production Editor David Xu, and finally our listeners –Thank You!</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>Startup like a rolling stone; trailblazing within the China music and event industry with Archie Hamilton founder and CEO of Split Works.</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Chinaccelerator</itunes:author>
      <itunes:image href="https://image.simplecastcdn.com/images/a0e035/a0e0352f-fcbe-4ea1-813c-f1a09496ed52/81177bc2-7d89-4544-8388-2200c44f3baf/3000x3000/1482733805artwork.jpg?aid=rss_feed"/>
      <itunes:duration>00:38:46</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>Building something that doesn&apos;t exist is what some entrepreneurs thrive on. The risk, challenges, and potential drove Archie Hamilton to pioneer an entire industry in China.  Archie Hamilton founder and CEO of Split Works, started in 2006 to help build the music festival industry in China. Realizing that there was no audience here, he started to make up the rules and fought to understand his audience while learning how to survive, and built one of the greatest music festivals in China. </itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>Building something that doesn&apos;t exist is what some entrepreneurs thrive on. The risk, challenges, and potential drove Archie Hamilton to pioneer an entire industry in China.  Archie Hamilton founder and CEO of Split Works, started in 2006 to help build the music festival industry in China. Realizing that there was no audience here, he started to make up the rules and fought to understand his audience while learning how to survive, and built one of the greatest music festivals in China. </itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>startup pulse, archie hamilton, china, industry, startup, podcast, splitworks, music china, festival, music</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
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      <title>How to Startup, Step 1; with Trevor Owens, Co-Founder of The Lean Startup Machine</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>Step 1: Validate your assumptions! Startups all over the world make the same mistake; they build a startup based on assumptions, with no data to validate a need. Trevor Owens, Co-Founder of the Lean Startup Machine, and author of The Lean Enterprise takes us through his winning method. His vision: &quot;I want to create more millionaire entrepreneurs; if you really want to start a unicorn, it really helps if you already built a successful company, it really helps even more if you have a few million in your bank.&quot;</p>
<p>China's start-up scene is energised by top down support and heavy competition. Trevor shares his secret to help startups validate and pivot to beat the competition. The focus is on building a company which impacts your consumers life; the money is a by product, not the goal. Listen in for the lean startup method from the master himself.</p>
<p>Show Notes: Jump ahead to topics<br />
2:00    Trevor Owens Intro<br />
7:00    Invalidating ideas using the Lean Startup Method<br />
14:00  Why Trevor has brought LSM to China and why it works so well in China<br />
18:15  China is the only real Silicon Valley Competition<br />
24:00  Lightning round question - How to do the method now<br />
26:50  contact Trevor Owen direct!</p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Sun, 20 Nov 2016 04:01:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Chinaccelerator)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Step 1: Validate your assumptions! Startups all over the world make the same mistake; they build a startup based on assumptions, with no data to validate a need. Trevor Owens, Co-Founder of the Lean Startup Machine, and author of The Lean Enterprise takes us through his winning method. His vision: &quot;I want to create more millionaire entrepreneurs; if you really want to start a unicorn, it really helps if you already built a successful company, it really helps even more if you have a few million in your bank.&quot;</p>
<p>China's start-up scene is energised by top down support and heavy competition. Trevor shares his secret to help startups validate and pivot to beat the competition. The focus is on building a company which impacts your consumers life; the money is a by product, not the goal. Listen in for the lean startup method from the master himself.</p>
<p>Show Notes: Jump ahead to topics<br />
2:00    Trevor Owens Intro<br />
7:00    Invalidating ideas using the Lean Startup Method<br />
14:00  Why Trevor has brought LSM to China and why it works so well in China<br />
18:15  China is the only real Silicon Valley Competition<br />
24:00  Lightning round question - How to do the method now<br />
26:50  contact Trevor Owen direct!</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>How to Startup, Step 1; with Trevor Owens, Co-Founder of The Lean Startup Machine</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Chinaccelerator</itunes:author>
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      <itunes:duration>00:29:04</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>Step 1: Validate your assumptions! Startups all over the world make the same mistake; they build a startup based on assumptions, with no data to validate a need. Trevor Owens, Co-Founder of the Lean Startup Machine, and author of The Lean Enterprise takes us through his winning method. His vision: &quot;I want to create more millionaire entrepreneurs; if you really want to start a unicorn, it really helps if you already built a successful company, it really helps even more if you have a few million in your bank.&quot; </itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>Step 1: Validate your assumptions! Startups all over the world make the same mistake; they build a startup based on assumptions, with no data to validate a need. Trevor Owens, Co-Founder of the Lean Startup Machine, and author of The Lean Enterprise takes us through his winning method. His vision: &quot;I want to create more millionaire entrepreneurs; if you really want to start a unicorn, it really helps if you already built a successful company, it really helps even more if you have a few million in your bank.&quot; </itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>san francisco, trevor owens, lean startup machine, china, validation board, podcast, shanghai, javelin board</itunes:keywords>
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      <title>Seeking and Taming the Unicorn Startup; 8x8 Speaker Series (3/3) with Peter Davison and David Chen, Unicorn Investors</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>PayPal and Pinterest; recognised instantaneously and an embodiment of the Unicorn Startup. This week, recorded Live!, and 3rd part series from Chinaccelerator's 8x8 event in Shanghai, Peter Davison, serial unicorn investor, breaks down the journey of these superstar startups having invested and built up both Pinterest and Paypal. David Chen Co-Founder of Angelvest, the first and largest seed investment group in China, also sheds light on how success is defined by the investor and the secret to getting funded in the East.</p>
<p>Thanks as always to our sponsors Chinaccelerator, People-Squared, and our syndication partner Technode. A huge thanks to our Producer, Vivian Law and Production Editor David Xu, and finally our listeners –Thank You!</p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Wed, 12 Oct 2016 11:30:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Chinaccelerator)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>PayPal and Pinterest; recognised instantaneously and an embodiment of the Unicorn Startup. This week, recorded Live!, and 3rd part series from Chinaccelerator's 8x8 event in Shanghai, Peter Davison, serial unicorn investor, breaks down the journey of these superstar startups having invested and built up both Pinterest and Paypal. David Chen Co-Founder of Angelvest, the first and largest seed investment group in China, also sheds light on how success is defined by the investor and the secret to getting funded in the East.</p>
<p>Thanks as always to our sponsors Chinaccelerator, People-Squared, and our syndication partner Technode. A huge thanks to our Producer, Vivian Law and Production Editor David Xu, and finally our listeners –Thank You!</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>Seeking and Taming the Unicorn Startup; 8x8 Speaker Series (3/3) with Peter Davison and David Chen, Unicorn Investors</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Chinaccelerator</itunes:author>
      <itunes:image href="https://image.simplecastcdn.com/images/a0e035/a0e0352f-fcbe-4ea1-813c-f1a09496ed52/0775525c-d55d-4d30-835b-9b6e7181ee3f/3000x3000/1476272830artwork.jpg?aid=rss_feed"/>
      <itunes:duration>00:20:41</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>PayPal and Pinterest; recognised instantaneously and an embodiment of the Unicorn Startup. This week, recorded Live!, and 3rd part series from Chinaccelerator&apos;s 8x8 event in Shanghai, Peter Davison, serial unicorn investor, breaks down the journey of these superstar startups having invested and built up both Pinterest and Paypal. David Chen Co-Founder of Angelvest, the first and largest seed investment group in China, also sheds light on how success is defined by the investor and the secret to getting funded in the East.</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>PayPal and Pinterest; recognised instantaneously and an embodiment of the Unicorn Startup. This week, recorded Live!, and 3rd part series from Chinaccelerator&apos;s 8x8 event in Shanghai, Peter Davison, serial unicorn investor, breaks down the journey of these superstar startups having invested and built up both Pinterest and Paypal. David Chen Co-Founder of Angelvest, the first and largest seed investment group in China, also sheds light on how success is defined by the investor and the secret to getting funded in the East.</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>paypal, funding, unicorn, david chen, china startup pulse, investor, fundraising, china, chinaccelerator, 8x8, startup, shanghai, pinterest, peter davidson</itunes:keywords>
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      <title>Mindful Entrepreneurism and the Unicorn Start-up Fantasy; with Geoffrey Handley, Founding General Partner at China Scot Fund</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>If you don't plan, then plan to fail. This week, Geoffrey Handley challenges the assumption that start-up failure is good and emphasises how founders shouldn't settle for mediocre wins.</p>
<p>Having co-founded 5 companies with his brothers, and invested in 30 (including acquisitions from Twitter, Salesforce and AOL!), Geoffrey is able to switch between the perspective of an investor, entrepreneur and mentor. He offers advice on selecting mentors strategically, as part of a grand master plan, and underlines the importance of ignoring the doubters and beating the odds with a bold, scary vision.</p>
<p>A very happy one year anniversary to the China Startup Pulse! A special thank you to our Producer Vivian Law and previous Producers Darren O'Connell and Qi Liu,  Production Editor David Xu, our sponsors Chinaccelerator, People-Squared, syndication partner Technode and finally our listeners –Thank You!</p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Wed, 28 Sep 2016 01:29:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Chinaccelerator)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>If you don't plan, then plan to fail. This week, Geoffrey Handley challenges the assumption that start-up failure is good and emphasises how founders shouldn't settle for mediocre wins.</p>
<p>Having co-founded 5 companies with his brothers, and invested in 30 (including acquisitions from Twitter, Salesforce and AOL!), Geoffrey is able to switch between the perspective of an investor, entrepreneur and mentor. He offers advice on selecting mentors strategically, as part of a grand master plan, and underlines the importance of ignoring the doubters and beating the odds with a bold, scary vision.</p>
<p>A very happy one year anniversary to the China Startup Pulse! A special thank you to our Producer Vivian Law and previous Producers Darren O'Connell and Qi Liu,  Production Editor David Xu, our sponsors Chinaccelerator, People-Squared, syndication partner Technode and finally our listeners –Thank You!</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>Mindful Entrepreneurism and the Unicorn Start-up Fantasy; with Geoffrey Handley, Founding General Partner at China Scot Fund</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Chinaccelerator</itunes:author>
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      <itunes:duration>00:27:59</itunes:duration>
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      <itunes:subtitle>If you don&apos;t plan, then plan to fail. This week, Geoffrey Handley challenges the assumption that start-up failure is good and emphasises how founders shouldn&apos;t settle for mediocre wins.</itunes:subtitle>
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      <description><![CDATA[<p>Founders talk about hard work, as much as good luck. This week, Arthur Hayes, Co-Founder of Bitmex, tells us why to build something that makes money right away, the importance of having supreme confidence in your own vision as an entrepreneur, and cuts right to the core of what bitcoin enables the World to do -financial inclusion and more open trade.</p>
<p>From a corporate banking background, to being awarded Asia's No.1 Tech Startup in 2016, Arthur shares why Asia innovates so well and explains how bitcoin is just the first contender in a future made up of digital currency.</p>
<p>Thanks as always to our sponsors Chinaccelerator, People-Squared, and our syndication partner Technode. A huge thanks to our Producer, Vivian Law and Production Editor David Xu, and finally our listeners –Thank You!</p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Wed, 14 Sep 2016 08:18:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Chinaccelerator)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Founders talk about hard work, as much as good luck. This week, Arthur Hayes, Co-Founder of Bitmex, tells us why to build something that makes money right away, the importance of having supreme confidence in your own vision as an entrepreneur, and cuts right to the core of what bitcoin enables the World to do -financial inclusion and more open trade.</p>
<p>From a corporate banking background, to being awarded Asia's No.1 Tech Startup in 2016, Arthur shares why Asia innovates so well and explains how bitcoin is just the first contender in a future made up of digital currency.</p>
<p>Thanks as always to our sponsors Chinaccelerator, People-Squared, and our syndication partner Technode. A huge thanks to our Producer, Vivian Law and Production Editor David Xu, and finally our listeners –Thank You!</p>
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      <itunes:title>Riding that Bitcoin Wave; with Arthur Hayes, CEO &amp; Co-Founder of Bitmex</itunes:title>
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      <title>Artificial Intelligence is Not Intelligent; Wechat Conference series (1/2); with Andrew Schorr, Co-Founder of Grata, and Edaan Getzel, Co-Founder of Rikai Labs</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>Living China comes hand-in-hand with having Wechat -one does not function without it. With payment solutions, business accounts, taxi services and more, Wechat's efficient utility services are far surpassing the likes of Whatsapp and Facebook messenger. This week, we podcast Live! From the Chat conference -China's largest Wechat conference for the international community, hosted in Shanghai by China Channel and Walk the Chat.</p>
<p>From the leafy rooftops of the conference, we caught up with Andrew Schorr, Co-Founder of Grata, and Edaan Getzel, Co-Founder of Rikai Labs after their speeches on stage, to share their thoughts on why we shouldn't celebrate too myopically the successes of Wechat, how chatbots can be built with personalities, and also contrary to it's name, why artificial intelligence actually lacks intelligence.</p>
<p>Thanks as always to our sponsors Chinaccelerator, People-Squared, and our syndication partner Technode. A huge thanks to our Producer, Vivian Law and Production Editor David Xu, and finally our listeners –Thank You!</p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Thu, 8 Sep 2016 07:48:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Chinaccelerator)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Living China comes hand-in-hand with having Wechat -one does not function without it. With payment solutions, business accounts, taxi services and more, Wechat's efficient utility services are far surpassing the likes of Whatsapp and Facebook messenger. This week, we podcast Live! From the Chat conference -China's largest Wechat conference for the international community, hosted in Shanghai by China Channel and Walk the Chat.</p>
<p>From the leafy rooftops of the conference, we caught up with Andrew Schorr, Co-Founder of Grata, and Edaan Getzel, Co-Founder of Rikai Labs after their speeches on stage, to share their thoughts on why we shouldn't celebrate too myopically the successes of Wechat, how chatbots can be built with personalities, and also contrary to it's name, why artificial intelligence actually lacks intelligence.</p>
<p>Thanks as always to our sponsors Chinaccelerator, People-Squared, and our syndication partner Technode. A huge thanks to our Producer, Vivian Law and Production Editor David Xu, and finally our listeners –Thank You!</p>
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      <description><![CDATA[<p>Wechat hacks are the new cheat sheet for optimising user and business growth. This week, recorded Live! from Chinaccelerator's 8x8 event in Shanghai, Jenny Zhu, Co-Founder of Open Language, shares how to fine-tune content strategy, avoid cheap tricks, allow users to buy what they love, and the importance of  tracking campaigns for sustained growth.</p>
<p>Want to join our next September 8X8 event? Then click to join us at <a href="https://www.eventbrite.com/e/beijing-chinaccelerator-8x8-speaker-event-tickets-27163744491">Beijing</a> or <a href="https://www.eventbrite.com/e/shanghai-chinaccelerator-8x8-speaker-event-tickets-27270507823">Shanghai</a> -and all for FREE! This year, 8x8 Shanghai will also capstone <a href="https://www.eventbrite.com/e/shanghai-chinaccelerator-8x8-speaker-event-tickets-27270507823">NewCo Shanghai</a>, a new kind of event experience -a mashup of an open studio tour and a business conference with the vibe of a music festival.</p>
<p>Thanks as always to our sponsors Chinaccelerator, People-Squared, and our syndication partner Technode. A huge thanks to our Producer, Vivian Law and Production Editor David Xu, and finally our listeners –Thank You!</p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Wed, 31 Aug 2016 08:01:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Chinaccelerator)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Wechat hacks are the new cheat sheet for optimising user and business growth. This week, recorded Live! from Chinaccelerator's 8x8 event in Shanghai, Jenny Zhu, Co-Founder of Open Language, shares how to fine-tune content strategy, avoid cheap tricks, allow users to buy what they love, and the importance of  tracking campaigns for sustained growth.</p>
<p>Want to join our next September 8X8 event? Then click to join us at <a href="https://www.eventbrite.com/e/beijing-chinaccelerator-8x8-speaker-event-tickets-27163744491">Beijing</a> or <a href="https://www.eventbrite.com/e/shanghai-chinaccelerator-8x8-speaker-event-tickets-27270507823">Shanghai</a> -and all for FREE! This year, 8x8 Shanghai will also capstone <a href="https://www.eventbrite.com/e/shanghai-chinaccelerator-8x8-speaker-event-tickets-27270507823">NewCo Shanghai</a>, a new kind of event experience -a mashup of an open studio tour and a business conference with the vibe of a music festival.</p>
<p>Thanks as always to our sponsors Chinaccelerator, People-Squared, and our syndication partner Technode. A huge thanks to our Producer, Vivian Law and Production Editor David Xu, and finally our listeners –Thank You!</p>
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      <description><![CDATA[<p>&quot;Mobile payments in China are at least 3-5 years ahead of Europe.&quot; This week, Tobias Pfütze, Consultant at Mediaman Shanghai, Partner at China Fintech, and G20 delegate for the Young Entrepreneurs Summit, makes a strong case in arguing how Fintech in Asia is not only different from everywhere else, but in fact, proves that China is leading the World in Mobile Payment Solutions, with the Fintech crown jewels of Wechat Wallet and Alipay.</p>
<p>The end of copycat China, as we discuss  examples of process innovation in China, how the Chinese are more open to digital solutions, and whether the lack of regulations has actually benefited the market. Want to geek out on Exchange-traded Funds, VIE structures, or simply want to hear about the disruptions in the Chinese Fintech innovation space? Then listen in to this superstar CA mentor's podcast!</p>
<p>Thanks as always to our sponsors Chinaccelerator, People-Squared, and our syndication partner Technode. A huge thanks to our Producer, Vivian Law and Production Editor David Xu, and finally our listeners –Thank You!</p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Tue, 23 Aug 2016 23:44:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Chinaccelerator)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>&quot;Mobile payments in China are at least 3-5 years ahead of Europe.&quot; This week, Tobias Pfütze, Consultant at Mediaman Shanghai, Partner at China Fintech, and G20 delegate for the Young Entrepreneurs Summit, makes a strong case in arguing how Fintech in Asia is not only different from everywhere else, but in fact, proves that China is leading the World in Mobile Payment Solutions, with the Fintech crown jewels of Wechat Wallet and Alipay.</p>
<p>The end of copycat China, as we discuss  examples of process innovation in China, how the Chinese are more open to digital solutions, and whether the lack of regulations has actually benefited the market. Want to geek out on Exchange-traded Funds, VIE structures, or simply want to hear about the disruptions in the Chinese Fintech innovation space? Then listen in to this superstar CA mentor's podcast!</p>
<p>Thanks as always to our sponsors Chinaccelerator, People-Squared, and our syndication partner Technode. A huge thanks to our Producer, Vivian Law and Production Editor David Xu, and finally our listeners –Thank You!</p>
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      <title>Becoming the Superhero Entrepreneur; 8X8 Speaker Series (1/3) with SiokSiok and James Fong, Storytelling Film Makers</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>Throughout time, superheroes have had a common set of attributes: unmatched resilience, defiance against doubters, and generally making the World a better place. Superhero Entrepreneurs are no different! This week, we welcome  two awesome storytelling film makers, SiokSiok and James Fong, recorded Live! from Chinaccelerator's 8x8 event in Shanghai, as they share how to market yourself as a Superhero Entrepreneur in a movie style narrative.</p>
<p>A bite-sized guide to extracting the 'geek talk', storytelling your business model and investment deck so that normal folks can understand your idea.'Live by discipline, not by mood'.  Many a quote-bomb to takeaway from this episode.</p>
<p>Want to join our next 8X8 event? Then click <a href="https://www.eventbrite.com/e/chinaccelerator-8x8-speaking-event-tickets-27163744491">here</a> and register for either Beijing or Shanghai -and all for FREE! This year, 8x8 Shanghai will also capstone <a href="http://newco-sh.com/">NewCo Shanghai</a>, a new kind of event experience -a mashup of an open studio tour and a business conference with the vibe of a music festival.</p>
<p>Thanks as always to our sponsors Chinaccelerator, People-Squared, and our syndication partner Technode. A huge thanks to our Producer, Vivian Law and Production Editor David Xu, and finally our listeners –Thank You!</p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Wed, 17 Aug 2016 03:30:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Chinaccelerator)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Throughout time, superheroes have had a common set of attributes: unmatched resilience, defiance against doubters, and generally making the World a better place. Superhero Entrepreneurs are no different! This week, we welcome  two awesome storytelling film makers, SiokSiok and James Fong, recorded Live! from Chinaccelerator's 8x8 event in Shanghai, as they share how to market yourself as a Superhero Entrepreneur in a movie style narrative.</p>
<p>A bite-sized guide to extracting the 'geek talk', storytelling your business model and investment deck so that normal folks can understand your idea.'Live by discipline, not by mood'.  Many a quote-bomb to takeaway from this episode.</p>
<p>Want to join our next 8X8 event? Then click <a href="https://www.eventbrite.com/e/chinaccelerator-8x8-speaking-event-tickets-27163744491">here</a> and register for either Beijing or Shanghai -and all for FREE! This year, 8x8 Shanghai will also capstone <a href="http://newco-sh.com/">NewCo Shanghai</a>, a new kind of event experience -a mashup of an open studio tour and a business conference with the vibe of a music festival.</p>
<p>Thanks as always to our sponsors Chinaccelerator, People-Squared, and our syndication partner Technode. A huge thanks to our Producer, Vivian Law and Production Editor David Xu, and finally our listeners –Thank You!</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <description><![CDATA[<p>TechCrunch -the leading technology media platform, dedicated to obsessively profiling startups and reviewing new Internet and tech news. What better way than to pick the brains of Ned Desmond, COO of TechCrunch, who joined us Live! at Shanghai's TechCrunch 2016 Conference! Ned chats to us about the hottest cross-border startups, the $6billion USD which TechCrunch companies raised, and also looks back on the biggest challenges TechCrunch faced. We also discuss the cultural phenomenon of Silicon Valley, its representation in popular media, and the impact this image has had on global startups. It doesn't matter whether you're in Silicon Valley or Silicon Alley in Beijing, this episode has something for every curious entrepreneur, investor or listener!</p>
<p>Thank you again to Ned, everyone at TechCrunch and Tech Node for their support, and our team, Producer Vivian Law and Production Editor David Xu, our sponsors Chinaccelerator and People Squared and most importantly you, our listener! If you would like to contact us please send an email to team@chinastartuppulse.com</p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Thu, 11 Aug 2016 06:50:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Chinaccelerator)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>TechCrunch -the leading technology media platform, dedicated to obsessively profiling startups and reviewing new Internet and tech news. What better way than to pick the brains of Ned Desmond, COO of TechCrunch, who joined us Live! at Shanghai's TechCrunch 2016 Conference! Ned chats to us about the hottest cross-border startups, the $6billion USD which TechCrunch companies raised, and also looks back on the biggest challenges TechCrunch faced. We also discuss the cultural phenomenon of Silicon Valley, its representation in popular media, and the impact this image has had on global startups. It doesn't matter whether you're in Silicon Valley or Silicon Alley in Beijing, this episode has something for every curious entrepreneur, investor or listener!</p>
<p>Thank you again to Ned, everyone at TechCrunch and Tech Node for their support, and our team, Producer Vivian Law and Production Editor David Xu, our sponsors Chinaccelerator and People Squared and most importantly you, our listener! If you would like to contact us please send an email to team@chinastartuppulse.com</p>
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      <itunes:title>China Startup Crunch; with Ned Desmond, COO of TechCrunch</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Chinaccelerator</itunes:author>
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      <itunes:subtitle>TechCrunch -the leading technology media platform, dedicated to obsessively profiling startups and reviewing new Internet and tech news. What better way than to pick the brains of Ned Desmond, COO of TechCrunch, who joined us Live! at Shanghai&apos;s TechCrunch 2016 Conference! Ned chats to us about the hottest cross-border startups, the $6billion USD which TechCrunch companies raised, and also looks back on the biggest challenges TechCrunch faced. We also discuss the cultural phenomenon of Silicon Valley, its representation in popular media, and the impact this image has had on global startups. It doesn&apos;t matter whether you&apos;re in Silicon Valley or Silicon Alley in Beijing, this episode has something for every curious entrepreneur, investor or listener!</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>techcrunch, media, fundraising, china, ned desmond, silicon valley, startup, shanghai, tech, challenges</itunes:keywords>
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      <title>Throwing Parties For a Living, with Stephane de Montgros, Co-Founder of Riviera Events &amp; The Hotelier Awards</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>Start-ups aren't all tech nerds and T-shirts; some evolve into elegant and classy enterprises, paid to essentially throw glitzy parties from the rooftops of China's hottest cities. This weeks guest, Stephane de Montgros, shares how he uprooted from France, moved to China, and co-founded China’s leading luxury hospitality events management company, Riviera Events, and The Hotelier Awards!</p>
<p>Pivoting from a working revenue model which catered for Shanghai's party nightlife, Stephane talks about how he took the risky leap to specialise exclusively on high-end luxury brands, the struggles that came with staying true to an entrepreneur's vision, underlines the importance of building trust and guanxi, and talks about the key reasons for keeping goodwill.</p>
<p>Thanks to our sponsors Chinaccelerator, People-Squared, and our syndication partner Technode. A huge thanks to our Producer Vivian Law and Production Editor David Xu, and finally our listeners –Thank You!</p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Fri, 29 Jul 2016 06:21:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Chinaccelerator)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Start-ups aren't all tech nerds and T-shirts; some evolve into elegant and classy enterprises, paid to essentially throw glitzy parties from the rooftops of China's hottest cities. This weeks guest, Stephane de Montgros, shares how he uprooted from France, moved to China, and co-founded China’s leading luxury hospitality events management company, Riviera Events, and The Hotelier Awards!</p>
<p>Pivoting from a working revenue model which catered for Shanghai's party nightlife, Stephane talks about how he took the risky leap to specialise exclusively on high-end luxury brands, the struggles that came with staying true to an entrepreneur's vision, underlines the importance of building trust and guanxi, and talks about the key reasons for keeping goodwill.</p>
<p>Thanks to our sponsors Chinaccelerator, People-Squared, and our syndication partner Technode. A huge thanks to our Producer Vivian Law and Production Editor David Xu, and finally our listeners –Thank You!</p>
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      <itunes:title>Throwing Parties For a Living, with Stephane de Montgros, Co-Founder of Riviera Events &amp; The Hotelier Awards</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Chinaccelerator</itunes:author>
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      <itunes:subtitle>Start-ups aren&apos;t all tech nerds and T-shirts; some evolve into elegant and classy enterprises, paid to essentially throw glitzy parties from the rooftops of China&apos;s hottest cities. This weeks guest, Stephane de Montgros, shares how he uprooted from France, moved to China, and co-founded China’s leading luxury hospitality events management company, Riviera Events, and The Hotelier Awards!</itunes:subtitle>
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      <title>Learn By Doing. Fail Faster. Succeed Faster; with Kevin Chen, Co-Founder of Italki</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>Hindsight is 20/20. This week, Kevin Chen, tells us the hard lessons learned since ‘committing career suicide’; quitting his corporate life with Merrill Lynch and Lehman Brothers, to building multiple start-ups before co-founding Italki, a leading language learning social network that connects students and teachers for language exchange and paid tutoring, which recently closed a US$3million round of funding.</p>
<p>“Stay true to your vision –the investor doesn’t run your company, you do.” Kevin shares his learnings on recognizing bad deals, filtering out advice, and 'zooming out' to understand the different perspectives and motives of investors, entrepreneurs and advisors.</p>
<p>Also, if you haven’t been to a Techyizhu event yet you're missing out on the hottest gatherings in Shanghai for the start-up community, including the bi-annual Barcamp and many more. Kevin is one of the founding fathers of Techyizu and touches on why they've been so successful with their non-profit and volunteer-only strategy and how you can get involved.</p>
<p>Thanks to our sponsors Chinaccelerator, People-Squared, and our syndication partner Technode. A huge thanks to our Producer Vivian Law and Production Editor David Xu, and finally our listeners –Thank You!</p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Thu, 21 Jul 2016 10:47:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Chinaccelerator)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Hindsight is 20/20. This week, Kevin Chen, tells us the hard lessons learned since ‘committing career suicide’; quitting his corporate life with Merrill Lynch and Lehman Brothers, to building multiple start-ups before co-founding Italki, a leading language learning social network that connects students and teachers for language exchange and paid tutoring, which recently closed a US$3million round of funding.</p>
<p>“Stay true to your vision –the investor doesn’t run your company, you do.” Kevin shares his learnings on recognizing bad deals, filtering out advice, and 'zooming out' to understand the different perspectives and motives of investors, entrepreneurs and advisors.</p>
<p>Also, if you haven’t been to a Techyizhu event yet you're missing out on the hottest gatherings in Shanghai for the start-up community, including the bi-annual Barcamp and many more. Kevin is one of the founding fathers of Techyizu and touches on why they've been so successful with their non-profit and volunteer-only strategy and how you can get involved.</p>
<p>Thanks to our sponsors Chinaccelerator, People-Squared, and our syndication partner Technode. A huge thanks to our Producer Vivian Law and Production Editor David Xu, and finally our listeners –Thank You!</p>
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      <itunes:title>Learn By Doing. Fail Faster. Succeed Faster; with Kevin Chen, Co-Founder of Italki</itunes:title>
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      <itunes:subtitle>Hindsight is 20/20. This week, Kevin Chen, tells us the hard lessons learned since ‘committing career suicide’; quitting his corporate life with Merrill Lynch and Lehman Brothers, to building multiple start-ups before co-founding Italki, a leading language learning social network that connects students and teachers for language exchange and paid tutoring, which recently closed a US$3million round of funding.</itunes:subtitle>
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      <description><![CDATA[<p>Disruptors within the manufacturing space are forcing a change to the old adage 'Made in China'. This week’s guest, Jacob Rothman, Founding Partner of Platform88, tells us exactly how technology has caused manufacturing in China to pivot. Platform88, a manufacturing network that brings ideas to life, is at the forefront of this movement.</p>
<p>From his young dreams of becoming a Rabbi, to experiencing a previous exit, to owning his own factory in China that directly supplies companies like Walmart and Canadian Tire, Jacob discusses the manufacturing obstacles that start-ups often face, the evolution of manufacturing, and how factories are more willing to accept MOQs (Minimal Order Quantities) and manufacture on demand, with good quality, rather than mass produce at low quality.</p>
<p>Thank you to our sponsors Chinaccelerator, People-Squared, and our syndication partner Technode. A huge thanks to our Producer Vivian Law and Production Editor David Xu, and finally our listeners –Thank You!</p>
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      <pubDate>Fri, 15 Jul 2016 10:47:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Chinaccelerator)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Disruptors within the manufacturing space are forcing a change to the old adage 'Made in China'. This week’s guest, Jacob Rothman, Founding Partner of Platform88, tells us exactly how technology has caused manufacturing in China to pivot. Platform88, a manufacturing network that brings ideas to life, is at the forefront of this movement.</p>
<p>From his young dreams of becoming a Rabbi, to experiencing a previous exit, to owning his own factory in China that directly supplies companies like Walmart and Canadian Tire, Jacob discusses the manufacturing obstacles that start-ups often face, the evolution of manufacturing, and how factories are more willing to accept MOQs (Minimal Order Quantities) and manufacture on demand, with good quality, rather than mass produce at low quality.</p>
<p>Thank you to our sponsors Chinaccelerator, People-Squared, and our syndication partner Technode. A huge thanks to our Producer Vivian Law and Production Editor David Xu, and finally our listeners –Thank You!</p>
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      <itunes:title>&quot;Made in China&quot; to &quot;Made by China&quot;, with Jacob Rothman, Founding Partner of Platform88</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Chinaccelerator</itunes:author>
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      <itunes:summary>Disruptors within the manufacturing space are forcing a change to the old adage &apos;Made in China&apos;. This week’s guest, Jacob Rothman, Founding Partner of Platform88, tells us exactly how technology has caused manufacturing in China to pivot. Platform88, a manufacturing network that brings ideas to life, is at the forefront of this movement.</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>Disruptors within the manufacturing space are forcing a change to the old adage &apos;Made in China&apos;. This week’s guest, Jacob Rothman, Founding Partner of Platform88, tells us exactly how technology has caused manufacturing in China to pivot. Platform88, a manufacturing network that brings ideas to life, is at the forefront of this movement.</itunes:subtitle>
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      <title>Bitcoin Unchained: Blockchain without the Bitcoin; with Remington Ong, Partner of Fenbushi Capital</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>Blockchain isn’t entirely synonymous with bitcoin. Want to know how to differentiate Blockchain vs. Bitcoin in under 30 seconds? Then tune in with Remington Ong, Partner of Fenbushi, a $50million fund, that is headquartered in Shanghai and specifically invests in early-stage Blockchain technology startups.</p>
<p>From an MBA to Merrill Lynch, as well as a Chinaccelerator Alumni, Rem tells us what investors look for in pitches, discusses smart contracts, and how Blockchain is applicable in almost every vertical to the extent where we’ll all be using Blockchain without even knowing it within a decade!</p>
<p>Thank you to our sponsors Chinaccelerator, People-Squared, and our syndication partner Technode. A huge thanks to our Producer Vivian Law and Production Editor David Xu, and finally our listeners –Thank You!</p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Thu, 7 Jul 2016 03:35:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Chinaccelerator)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Blockchain isn’t entirely synonymous with bitcoin. Want to know how to differentiate Blockchain vs. Bitcoin in under 30 seconds? Then tune in with Remington Ong, Partner of Fenbushi, a $50million fund, that is headquartered in Shanghai and specifically invests in early-stage Blockchain technology startups.</p>
<p>From an MBA to Merrill Lynch, as well as a Chinaccelerator Alumni, Rem tells us what investors look for in pitches, discusses smart contracts, and how Blockchain is applicable in almost every vertical to the extent where we’ll all be using Blockchain without even knowing it within a decade!</p>
<p>Thank you to our sponsors Chinaccelerator, People-Squared, and our syndication partner Technode. A huge thanks to our Producer Vivian Law and Production Editor David Xu, and finally our listeners –Thank You!</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>Bitcoin Unchained: Blockchain without the Bitcoin; with Remington Ong, Partner of Fenbushi Capital</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Chinaccelerator</itunes:author>
      <itunes:image href="https://image.simplecastcdn.com/images/a0e035/a0e0352f-fcbe-4ea1-813c-f1a09496ed52/0baa5d1a-c503-4c5d-b984-13bd471e59f8/3000x3000/1467865365artwork.jpg?aid=rss_feed"/>
      <itunes:duration>00:47:23</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>Blockchain isn’t entirely synonymous with bitcoin. Want to know how to differentiate Blockchain vs. Bitcoin in under 30 seconds? Then tune in with Remington Ong, Partner of Fenbushi, a $50million fund, that is headquartered in Shanghai and specifically invests in early-stage Blockchain technology startups.</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>Blockchain isn’t entirely synonymous with bitcoin. Want to know how to differentiate Blockchain vs. Bitcoin in under 30 seconds? Then tune in with Remington Ong, Partner of Fenbushi, a $50million fund, that is headquartered in Shanghai and specifically invests in early-stage Blockchain technology startups.</itunes:subtitle>
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      <title>Coffee, Bagels &amp; Beer Oh My! with David Seminsky, Founder of Sumerian Coffee and Dogtown</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>Known for amazing bagels and craft lattes in Shanghai, David Seminsky tells us about his whirlwind China adventures including his early days at Apple and sharing an office with Steve Jobs, to accidental China jail time, to founding a string of successful brick-and-mortar businesses: Sumerian Coffee, Boom-Boom Bagel and everyone's favorite curbside pub Dogtown!</p>
<p>Podcasting alongside two of the cutest sidekick pups (no, not Todd and Ryan), David shares how he balances risks and opportunities in business, overcame the challenges of local competition, lawsuits, and employee management, yet still considers China the next frontier for business.</p>
<p>Thanks to our sponsors Chinaccelerator, People-Squared, and our syndication partner TechNode. A huge thanks to our Producer Vivian Law and Production Editor David Xu, and finally our listeners –Thank You!</p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Wed, 29 Jun 2016 09:38:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Chinaccelerator)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Known for amazing bagels and craft lattes in Shanghai, David Seminsky tells us about his whirlwind China adventures including his early days at Apple and sharing an office with Steve Jobs, to accidental China jail time, to founding a string of successful brick-and-mortar businesses: Sumerian Coffee, Boom-Boom Bagel and everyone's favorite curbside pub Dogtown!</p>
<p>Podcasting alongside two of the cutest sidekick pups (no, not Todd and Ryan), David shares how he balances risks and opportunities in business, overcame the challenges of local competition, lawsuits, and employee management, yet still considers China the next frontier for business.</p>
<p>Thanks to our sponsors Chinaccelerator, People-Squared, and our syndication partner TechNode. A huge thanks to our Producer Vivian Law and Production Editor David Xu, and finally our listeners –Thank You!</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>Coffee, Bagels &amp; Beer Oh My! with David Seminsky, Founder of Sumerian Coffee and Dogtown</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Chinaccelerator</itunes:author>
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      <itunes:summary>Known for amazing bagels and craft lattes in Shanghai, David Seminsky tells us about his whirlwind China adventures including his early days at Apple and sharing an office with Steve Jobs, to accidental China jail time, to founding a string of successful brick-and-mortar businesses: Sumerian Coffee, Boom-Boom Bagel and everyone&apos;s favorite curbside pub Dogtown!</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>Known for amazing bagels and craft lattes in Shanghai, David Seminsky tells us about his whirlwind China adventures including his early days at Apple and sharing an office with Steve Jobs, to accidental China jail time, to founding a string of successful brick-and-mortar businesses: Sumerian Coffee, Boom-Boom Bagel and everyone&apos;s favorite curbside pub Dogtown!</itunes:subtitle>
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      <title>Digging Under the Great Firewall, Steve Mushero, Co-Fouder of ChinaNetCloud</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>Ever wondered who operates the internet? This week, Tudou’s first foreigner CTO, Steve Mushero, tells us how he uprooted from the Valley, moved to China, and co-founded China’s 1st and leading cloud service, ChinaNet Cloud - essentially running the backend to the World’s largest internet user base!</p>
<p>Connecting giants such as Amazon and Alibaba to their online audiences, Steve shares how he makes cross border IT transactions faster, and the importance of adaptability to target the Chinese market. Successfully raising 9 million USD from local investors, Steve discusses the difference between negotiating local and foreign investment, sourcing trustworthy local leadership, and predicts how the QR code phenomenon might expand beyond Chinese borders.</p>
<p>Thanks to our sponsors Chinaccelerator, People-Squared, and our syndication partner Technode. A huge thanks to our Producer Vivian Law and Production Editor David Xu, and of course to you, our listeners – Thank You!</p>
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      <pubDate>Wed, 15 Jun 2016 05:37:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Chinaccelerator)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Ever wondered who operates the internet? This week, Tudou’s first foreigner CTO, Steve Mushero, tells us how he uprooted from the Valley, moved to China, and co-founded China’s 1st and leading cloud service, ChinaNet Cloud - essentially running the backend to the World’s largest internet user base!</p>
<p>Connecting giants such as Amazon and Alibaba to their online audiences, Steve shares how he makes cross border IT transactions faster, and the importance of adaptability to target the Chinese market. Successfully raising 9 million USD from local investors, Steve discusses the difference between negotiating local and foreign investment, sourcing trustworthy local leadership, and predicts how the QR code phenomenon might expand beyond Chinese borders.</p>
<p>Thanks to our sponsors Chinaccelerator, People-Squared, and our syndication partner Technode. A huge thanks to our Producer Vivian Law and Production Editor David Xu, and of course to you, our listeners – Thank You!</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>Digging Under the Great Firewall, Steve Mushero, Co-Fouder of ChinaNetCloud</itunes:title>
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      <itunes:duration>00:39:45</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>Ever wondered who operates the internet? This week, Tudou’s first foreigner CTO, Steve Mushero, tells us how he uprooted from the Valley, moved to China, and co-founded China’s 1st and leading cloud service, ChinaNet Cloud - essentially running the backend to the World’s largest internet user base!
 </itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>Ever wondered who operates the internet? This week, Tudou’s first foreigner CTO, Steve Mushero, tells us how he uprooted from the Valley, moved to China, and co-founded China’s 1st and leading cloud service, ChinaNet Cloud - essentially running the backend to the World’s largest internet user base!
 </itunes:subtitle>
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      <itunes:episode>33</itunes:episode>
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      <title>The Solo Bootstrapper, with Ronan Berder, CEO and Founder of Wiredcraft</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>Building a startup is hard enough but going solo in China, without a Chinese co-founder, is exactly what Ronan Berder, CEO and Founder of Wiredcraft, did. This week we talk about how he bootstrapped his company from the ashes of a failed startup into a global DevOps company, with huge international clients such as the UN, CNN, Starbucks and the Worldbank.</p>
<p>Embracing the path less travelled, Ronan shares his struggles, the pivots, and staying lean as a start-up, and how he literally lived out of a dufflebag in AirBnBs for 3 years. He also takes us through how investment decisions effect your growth process and his latest success powering the recent election in Myanmar.</p>
<p>Thanks as always to our sponsors Chinaccelerator, People-Squared, and our syndication partner TechNode. A huge thanks to our Producer Vivian Law and Production Editor David Xu</p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Wed, 1 Jun 2016 07:17:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Chinaccelerator)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Building a startup is hard enough but going solo in China, without a Chinese co-founder, is exactly what Ronan Berder, CEO and Founder of Wiredcraft, did. This week we talk about how he bootstrapped his company from the ashes of a failed startup into a global DevOps company, with huge international clients such as the UN, CNN, Starbucks and the Worldbank.</p>
<p>Embracing the path less travelled, Ronan shares his struggles, the pivots, and staying lean as a start-up, and how he literally lived out of a dufflebag in AirBnBs for 3 years. He also takes us through how investment decisions effect your growth process and his latest success powering the recent election in Myanmar.</p>
<p>Thanks as always to our sponsors Chinaccelerator, People-Squared, and our syndication partner TechNode. A huge thanks to our Producer Vivian Law and Production Editor David Xu</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>The Solo Bootstrapper, with Ronan Berder, CEO and Founder of Wiredcraft</itunes:title>
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      <itunes:subtitle>Building a startup is hard enough but going solo in China, without a Chinese co-founder, is exactly what Ronan Berder, CEO and Founder of Wiredcraft, did. This week we talk about how he bootstrapped his company from the ashes of a failed startup into a global DevOps company, with huge international clients such as the UN, CNN, Starbucks and the Worldbank. </itunes:subtitle>
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      <title>The Hard Thing about Hard (China) Things, TR Harrington, Founder of Darwin Marketing</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>Failing in China’s harsh start-up climate is an all too common occurrence for those foreigners with the guts to chase middle kingdom success. If success is met however, one must then begin the arduous task of then just keeping the door open. Successfully exiting? Folklore. This week’s guest, TR Harrington shares with us the hard things he learned along the way: breaking up with business partners, optimising deal terms with stakeholders, raising money just before the financial crisis, and how he managed to complete his journey on a high by being acquired by iProspects!</p>
<p>Understanding the highs of serendipity in Shanghai, TR discusses how to pivot your business, the change in the marketing landscape and the importance of surrounding yourself with the right hidden or co-founders.</p>
<p>Thanks to our sponsors Chinaccelerator, People-Squared, and our syndication partner Technode. Thanks to our Producers and Editor, Vivian and David, and finally our listeners –Thank You!</p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Wed, 25 May 2016 10:39:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Chinaccelerator)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Failing in China’s harsh start-up climate is an all too common occurrence for those foreigners with the guts to chase middle kingdom success. If success is met however, one must then begin the arduous task of then just keeping the door open. Successfully exiting? Folklore. This week’s guest, TR Harrington shares with us the hard things he learned along the way: breaking up with business partners, optimising deal terms with stakeholders, raising money just before the financial crisis, and how he managed to complete his journey on a high by being acquired by iProspects!</p>
<p>Understanding the highs of serendipity in Shanghai, TR discusses how to pivot your business, the change in the marketing landscape and the importance of surrounding yourself with the right hidden or co-founders.</p>
<p>Thanks to our sponsors Chinaccelerator, People-Squared, and our syndication partner Technode. Thanks to our Producers and Editor, Vivian and David, and finally our listeners –Thank You!</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>The Hard Thing about Hard (China) Things, TR Harrington, Founder of Darwin Marketing</itunes:title>
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      <itunes:subtitle>Failing in China’s harsh start-up climate is an all too common occurrence for those foreigners with the guts to chase middle kingdom success. If success is met however, one must then begin the arduous task of then just keeping the door open. Successfully exiting? Folklore. This week’s guest, TR Harrington shares with us the hard things he learned along the way: breaking up with business partners, optimising deal terms with stakeholders, raising money just before the financial crisis, and how he managed to complete his journey on a high by being acquired by iProspects!</itunes:subtitle>
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      <title>3D Printing a Better World ; with Lucio Pentagna Guimaraes Neto, Founder of XinFab</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>Entrepreneurs worldwide have a set of common values. Do work you love. Embrace change and risk. Build things that matter. Make a positive impact. This week’s guest, Lucio Pentagna Guimaraes Neto, tells us how he pivoted from his Brazillian legal, MBA and corporate CEO background, to sailing the world, end up in China, self-learn 3D modelling, and go onto founding Shanghai’s first collaborative maker space, XinFab.</p>
<p>Crazy about machines, Lucio discusses how he merges his passion for 3D printing with his farming heritage. Now building a “hack-vacation” in South Portugal, Lucio discusses his latest project –a getaway for do-ers; get your own work done, do sustainable farming and surf on the side –who needs mainstream Bali.</p>
<p>Thanks as always to our sponsors Chinaccelerator, People-Squared, and our syndication partner Technode. A huge thanks to our Producers and Editor, Vivian, Darren and David, and finally our listeners –Thank You!</p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Thu, 19 May 2016 05:35:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Chinaccelerator)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Entrepreneurs worldwide have a set of common values. Do work you love. Embrace change and risk. Build things that matter. Make a positive impact. This week’s guest, Lucio Pentagna Guimaraes Neto, tells us how he pivoted from his Brazillian legal, MBA and corporate CEO background, to sailing the world, end up in China, self-learn 3D modelling, and go onto founding Shanghai’s first collaborative maker space, XinFab.</p>
<p>Crazy about machines, Lucio discusses how he merges his passion for 3D printing with his farming heritage. Now building a “hack-vacation” in South Portugal, Lucio discusses his latest project –a getaway for do-ers; get your own work done, do sustainable farming and surf on the side –who needs mainstream Bali.</p>
<p>Thanks as always to our sponsors Chinaccelerator, People-Squared, and our syndication partner Technode. A huge thanks to our Producers and Editor, Vivian, Darren and David, and finally our listeners –Thank You!</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>3D Printing a Better World ; with Lucio Pentagna Guimaraes Neto, Founder of XinFab</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Chinaccelerator</itunes:author>
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      <itunes:summary>Entrepreneurs worldwide have a set of common values. Do work you love. Embrace change and risk. Build things that matter. Make a positive impact. This week’s guest, Lucio Pentagna Guimaraes Neto, tells us how he pivoted from his Brazillian legal, MBA and corporate CEO background, to sailing the world, end up in China, self-learn 3D modelling, and go onto founding Shanghai’s first collaborative maker space, XinFab.</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>Entrepreneurs worldwide have a set of common values. Do work you love. Embrace change and risk. Build things that matter. Make a positive impact. This week’s guest, Lucio Pentagna Guimaraes Neto, tells us how he pivoted from his Brazillian legal, MBA and corporate CEO background, to sailing the world, end up in China, self-learn 3D modelling, and go onto founding Shanghai’s first collaborative maker space, XinFab.</itunes:subtitle>
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      <title>Winning With Attitude; with Jared Turner, Co-Founder of Cinnaswirl</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>We've discussed the value of Guanxi when starting up in China, but there is another cultural phenomenon here commonly known as &quot;giving face&quot;. This can be one of the most difficult pills to swallow for foreigners starting up in China but can prove to be an extremely valuable asset for those that can pull it off well. This episode really dove deep into how to mitigate your frustrations with some of China's systems and bureaucracy,  and where to look for opportunities in them instead.</p>
<p>Jared has demonstrated the &quot;cowboy attitude&quot; perfectly in his path to China, leaving behind a great corporate offering post MBA, liquidating his assets, and bringing his wife and two kids to China on a whim of interest in the Middle Kingdom. Now a family of 6(!) Jared is growing his newest child Cinnaswirl into one of Shanghai's hottest brick-and-mortar startups.</p>
<p>Thank you to our sponsors, Chinaccelerator, People-Squared, and our syndication partner Technode! A huge thanks to Vivian, Darren, David who help us make the show and everyone who listens! Thank you!</p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Wed, 11 May 2016 09:24:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Chinaccelerator)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>We've discussed the value of Guanxi when starting up in China, but there is another cultural phenomenon here commonly known as &quot;giving face&quot;. This can be one of the most difficult pills to swallow for foreigners starting up in China but can prove to be an extremely valuable asset for those that can pull it off well. This episode really dove deep into how to mitigate your frustrations with some of China's systems and bureaucracy,  and where to look for opportunities in them instead.</p>
<p>Jared has demonstrated the &quot;cowboy attitude&quot; perfectly in his path to China, leaving behind a great corporate offering post MBA, liquidating his assets, and bringing his wife and two kids to China on a whim of interest in the Middle Kingdom. Now a family of 6(!) Jared is growing his newest child Cinnaswirl into one of Shanghai's hottest brick-and-mortar startups.</p>
<p>Thank you to our sponsors, Chinaccelerator, People-Squared, and our syndication partner Technode! A huge thanks to Vivian, Darren, David who help us make the show and everyone who listens! Thank you!</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>Winning With Attitude; with Jared Turner, Co-Founder of Cinnaswirl</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Chinaccelerator</itunes:author>
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      <itunes:summary>We&apos;ve discussed the value of Guanxi when starting up in China, but there is another cultural phenomenon here commonly known as &quot;giving face&quot;. This can be one of the most difficult pills to swallow for foreigners starting up in China but can prove to be an extremely valuable asset for those that can pull it off well. This episode really dove deep into how to mitigate your frustrations with some of China&apos;s systems and beaurocracy,  and where to look for opportunites in them instead.</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>We&apos;ve discussed the value of Guanxi when starting up in China, but there is another cultural phenomenon here commonly known as &quot;giving face&quot;. This can be one of the most difficult pills to swallow for foreigners starting up in China but can prove to be an extremely valuable asset for those that can pull it off well. This episode really dove deep into how to mitigate your frustrations with some of China&apos;s systems and beaurocracy,  and where to look for opportunites in them instead.</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>china, startup, podcast, food and beverage, jared turner, f&amp;b, shanghai, cinnaswirl</itunes:keywords>
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      <title>Marketplace Lending in China; with Dr. Tharon Smith, Managing Director of Lendit China</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>China is the largest market place for internet lending in the world, almost quadrupling the rest of the world combined at nearly $60 billion in 'originations' (where loans are being 'originated'). We discuss why this is the case talking about the 'black economy' in China that has moved online, and the lack of the ability to gain credit or obtain a proper credit score. We also talk about the role that internet banks are going to play in this field helping small to medium businesses obtain loans in the future.</p>
<p>Tharon also educates us on the proper terminology in which to use when discussing P2P which should be referred to as internet financing, marketplace lending or, her favorite, inclusive finance, because we're helping to finance each other.</p>
<p>A huge thanks to our sponsors Chinaccelerator, People-Squared, and our syndication partner Technode!</p>
<p>And as always, thanks to our team, David, Darren, and Vivian.</p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Wed, 4 May 2016 10:34:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Chinaccelerator)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>China is the largest market place for internet lending in the world, almost quadrupling the rest of the world combined at nearly $60 billion in 'originations' (where loans are being 'originated'). We discuss why this is the case talking about the 'black economy' in China that has moved online, and the lack of the ability to gain credit or obtain a proper credit score. We also talk about the role that internet banks are going to play in this field helping small to medium businesses obtain loans in the future.</p>
<p>Tharon also educates us on the proper terminology in which to use when discussing P2P which should be referred to as internet financing, marketplace lending or, her favorite, inclusive finance, because we're helping to finance each other.</p>
<p>A huge thanks to our sponsors Chinaccelerator, People-Squared, and our syndication partner Technode!</p>
<p>And as always, thanks to our team, David, Darren, and Vivian.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>Marketplace Lending in China; with Dr. Tharon Smith, Managing Director of Lendit China</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Chinaccelerator</itunes:author>
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      <itunes:duration>00:35:09</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>China is the largest market place for internet lending in the world, almost quadrupling the rest of the world combined at nearly $60 billion in &apos;originations&apos; (where loans are being &apos;originated&apos;). We discuss why this is the case talking about the &apos;black economy&apos; in China that has moved online, and the lack of the ability to gain credit or obtain a proper credit score. We also talk about the role that internet banks are going to play in this field helping small to medium businesses obtain loans in the future.
</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>China is the largest market place for internet lending in the world, almost quadrupling the rest of the world combined at nearly $60 billion in &apos;originations&apos; (where loans are being &apos;originated&apos;). We discuss why this is the case talking about the &apos;black economy&apos; in China that has moved online, and the lack of the ability to gain credit or obtain a proper credit score. We also talk about the role that internet banks are going to play in this field helping small to medium businesses obtain loans in the future.
</itunes:subtitle>
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      <title>China’s Bitcoin Obsession; with Bobby Lee, CEO of BTCC</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>Stanford before it was cool; Yahoo! before internet mail and search; Walmart e-commerce in China:  To say Mr. Lee has been ahead of the game would be a serious understatement. Joining BTCC as CEO in 2013, Mr. Lee has grown BTCC to become China’s no. 1 Bitcoin giant, and one of the largest Bitcoin exchanges in the world.<br />
 <br />
Tune in with us as we mine through the ins and outs of blockchain technology, discussing why China can’t keep it’s hands off Bitcoin, and why, in the opinion of Mr. Lee, it is forever here to stay. </p>
<p>Thank you to our sponsors, Chinaccelerator, People-Squared, and our syndication partner TechNode, and thank you to our team, David, Vivian, and Darren.</p>
<p>Email us at Team@chinastartuppulse.com</p>
<p>Follow us on iTunes or any podcast platform to get the cast in your pocket automatically every week.</p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Wed, 27 Apr 2016 07:43:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Chinaccelerator)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Stanford before it was cool; Yahoo! before internet mail and search; Walmart e-commerce in China:  To say Mr. Lee has been ahead of the game would be a serious understatement. Joining BTCC as CEO in 2013, Mr. Lee has grown BTCC to become China’s no. 1 Bitcoin giant, and one of the largest Bitcoin exchanges in the world.<br />
 <br />
Tune in with us as we mine through the ins and outs of blockchain technology, discussing why China can’t keep it’s hands off Bitcoin, and why, in the opinion of Mr. Lee, it is forever here to stay. </p>
<p>Thank you to our sponsors, Chinaccelerator, People-Squared, and our syndication partner TechNode, and thank you to our team, David, Vivian, and Darren.</p>
<p>Email us at Team@chinastartuppulse.com</p>
<p>Follow us on iTunes or any podcast platform to get the cast in your pocket automatically every week.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>China’s Bitcoin Obsession; with Bobby Lee, CEO of BTCC</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Chinaccelerator</itunes:author>
      <itunes:image href="https://image.simplecastcdn.com/images/a0e035/a0e0352f-fcbe-4ea1-813c-f1a09496ed52/6a6a4197-33f9-4482-84da-2073515c9353/3000x3000/1461743431artwork.jpg?aid=rss_feed"/>
      <itunes:duration>00:41:54</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>Stanford before it was cool; Yahoo! before internet mail and search; Walmart e-commerce in China:  To say Mr. Lee has been ahead of the game would be a serious understatement. Joining BTCC as CEO in 2013, Mr. Lee has grown BTCC to become China’s no. 1 Bitcoin giant, and one of the largest Bitcoin exchanges in the world.</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>Stanford before it was cool; Yahoo! before internet mail and search; Walmart e-commerce in China:  To say Mr. Lee has been ahead of the game would be a serious understatement. Joining BTCC as CEO in 2013, Mr. Lee has grown BTCC to become China’s no. 1 Bitcoin giant, and one of the largest Bitcoin exchanges in the world.</itunes:subtitle>
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      <title>Advertising the China Movement, with Milo Chao, Chief Strategy Officer at TBWA</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>Milo is an expert in advertising, who knows how to bridge the gap between big business and the solutions startups bring to the table. He is an Expert in Residence at Chinaccelerator who helps teams develop their story and message. He has worked at many of the big names in advertising and brings his experience and approach to startups in today's cast.</p>
<p>Beyond crafting your message for impact and reach, the most important part of your pitch is understanding your audience better than anyone else. Milo talks about how advertising is changing in China and what is needed to stay ahead of the curve, innovation.</p>
<p>Thanks to our sponsors Chinaccelerator, People-Squared, and syndication partner Technode.com</p>
<p>Please leave a review on iTunes and write us at team@chinastartuppulse.com</p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Tue, 19 Apr 2016 03:12:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Chinaccelerator)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Milo is an expert in advertising, who knows how to bridge the gap between big business and the solutions startups bring to the table. He is an Expert in Residence at Chinaccelerator who helps teams develop their story and message. He has worked at many of the big names in advertising and brings his experience and approach to startups in today's cast.</p>
<p>Beyond crafting your message for impact and reach, the most important part of your pitch is understanding your audience better than anyone else. Milo talks about how advertising is changing in China and what is needed to stay ahead of the curve, innovation.</p>
<p>Thanks to our sponsors Chinaccelerator, People-Squared, and syndication partner Technode.com</p>
<p>Please leave a review on iTunes and write us at team@chinastartuppulse.com</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>Advertising the China Movement, with Milo Chao, Chief Strategy Officer at TBWA</itunes:title>
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      <title>Starting Up: It&apos;s A Marathon; with Greg Nance, founder of Dyad</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>Greg gives us insight into how he has raised money from leading investors, SOSV and 500start-ups. He tells us his passion for informing and inspiring the marketplace through client obsession to boost their net promoter score. Greg, as “a chief everything officer”, shares how to run a start-up like he runs ultra-marathons and why entrepreneurs should “start before they are ready!”</p>
<p>Greg Nance, ultra-marathoner, ultra-motivator and entrepreneur out of Cambridge University in 2012 joins the podcast and brings exciting news! Today Greg announces the launch of Dyad (formerly ChaseFuture), a mentorship driven education service helping young people discover their strengths, chart professional development goals to prepare for job search through mentorship.</p>
<p>Enjoy!</p>
<p>Big thank you to our sponsors Chinaccelerator, People Squared, and technode. Thanks to David, Darren, and everyone that helps support this podcast.</p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Wed, 13 Apr 2016 04:11:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Chinaccelerator)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Greg gives us insight into how he has raised money from leading investors, SOSV and 500start-ups. He tells us his passion for informing and inspiring the marketplace through client obsession to boost their net promoter score. Greg, as “a chief everything officer”, shares how to run a start-up like he runs ultra-marathons and why entrepreneurs should “start before they are ready!”</p>
<p>Greg Nance, ultra-marathoner, ultra-motivator and entrepreneur out of Cambridge University in 2012 joins the podcast and brings exciting news! Today Greg announces the launch of Dyad (formerly ChaseFuture), a mentorship driven education service helping young people discover their strengths, chart professional development goals to prepare for job search through mentorship.</p>
<p>Enjoy!</p>
<p>Big thank you to our sponsors Chinaccelerator, People Squared, and technode. Thanks to David, Darren, and everyone that helps support this podcast.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>Starting Up: It&apos;s A Marathon; with Greg Nance, founder of Dyad</itunes:title>
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      <itunes:subtitle>Greg gives us insight into how he has raised money from leading investors, SOSV and 500start-ups. He tells us his passion for informing and inspiring the marketplace through client obsession to boost their net promoter score. Greg, as “a chief everything officer”, shares how to run a start-up like he runs ultra-marathons and why entrepreneurs should “start before they are ready!” </itunes:subtitle>
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      <description><![CDATA[<p>This week we dive into the legal landscape of starting up in China with the man who helped Kai Fu Lee put together the $500 million U.S. dollar fund, incubator and accelerator, Innovation Works. Benjamin left California to become an IP lawyer in Beijing in 2006, then post Innovation Works Benjamin joined Cooley LLP in China before recently joining Loeb &amp; Loeb, so he has an incredible amount of experience and knowledge that he brings to the podcast.</p>
<p>We discuss the state of IP protection in China given the concerns over getting 'copied' when entering China, and what are the most important documents and agreements to focus on at an early stage. We also lightly touch on the state of corporate law in China today and its history, as well as uncovering terms such as Most Favored Nation that seem to pop up regularly in investments docs here in China. An amazing cast with an amazing guest; we hope you enjoy!</p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Tue, 5 Apr 2016 02:10:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Todd Embley &amp; Ruan Shuken)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>This week we dive into the legal landscape of starting up in China with the man who helped Kai Fu Lee put together the $500 million U.S. dollar fund, incubator and accelerator, Innovation Works. Benjamin left California to become an IP lawyer in Beijing in 2006, then post Innovation Works Benjamin joined Cooley LLP in China before recently joining Loeb &amp; Loeb, so he has an incredible amount of experience and knowledge that he brings to the podcast.</p>
<p>We discuss the state of IP protection in China given the concerns over getting 'copied' when entering China, and what are the most important documents and agreements to focus on at an early stage. We also lightly touch on the state of corporate law in China today and its history, as well as uncovering terms such as Most Favored Nation that seem to pop up regularly in investments docs here in China. An amazing cast with an amazing guest; we hope you enjoy!</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>China&apos;s Legal Landscape for Startups, with Benjamin Qiu, Partner at Loeb &amp; Loeb LLP</itunes:title>
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      <itunes:subtitle>This week we dive into the legal landscape of starting up in China with the man who helped Kai Fu Lee put together the $500 million U.S. dollar fund, incubator and accelerator, Innovation Works. Benjamin left California to become an IP lawyer in Beijing in 2006, then post Innovation Works Benjamin joined Cooley LLP in China before recently joining Loeb &amp; Loeb, so he has an incredible amount of experience and knowledge that he brings to the podcast.</itunes:subtitle>
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      <title>Inside China&apos;s Tech World, with Dr. Lu Gang, founder of Technode</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>After a successful blogging career with Mobinode Gang then turned it into the first full-blown tech and startup online news site Technode. Ganglu also runs TechCrunch.cn, the China version of TechCrunch, and is a fixture in startup journalism in China. We tap into his incredible experience covering news and trends in China looking to better understand where the ecosystem has come from, where it is, and where it's going.</p>
<p>We also announce a new partnership with TechNode who will now be syndicating The China Startup Pulse! A great cast with tons of insight, so sit back and enjoy.</p>
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      <pubDate>Wed, 30 Mar 2016 08:27:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Chinaccelerator)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>After a successful blogging career with Mobinode Gang then turned it into the first full-blown tech and startup online news site Technode. Ganglu also runs TechCrunch.cn, the China version of TechCrunch, and is a fixture in startup journalism in China. We tap into his incredible experience covering news and trends in China looking to better understand where the ecosystem has come from, where it is, and where it's going.</p>
<p>We also announce a new partnership with TechNode who will now be syndicating The China Startup Pulse! A great cast with tons of insight, so sit back and enjoy.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>Inside China&apos;s Tech World, with Dr. Lu Gang, founder of Technode</itunes:title>
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      <itunes:subtitle>After a successful blogging career with Mobinode Gang then turned it into the first full-blown tech and startup online news site Technode. Ganglu also runs TechCrunch.cn, the China version of TechCrunch, and is a fixture in startup journalism in China. We tap into his incredible experience covering news and trends in China looking to better understand where the ecosystem has come from, where it is, and where it&apos;s going.</itunes:subtitle>
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      <title>Crowdsourcing, co-founders and the first Chinese start-up to be accepted to Y-Combinator.</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>Buckle up as we welcome one of China's top entrepreneurs David Chen, CEO of Strikingly.com. Having quit Goldman Sachs and his studies at the University of Chicago, despite his parent's wishes to the contrary, David never gave up on his dream and followed it to Silicon Valley despite not getting into Y-Combinator on his first attempt.</p>
<p>David has very much followed the Lean Start-up methodology in his rise to fame. He shares valuable insights on his own lean path to success, eventually landing a spot in Y-Combinator, one of the world's most renowned accelerator programs in Silicon Valley. David never gave up, admitting this was one of the key attributes top accelerators like Y-Combinator look for in founders. We hope you enjoy.</p>
<p>A huge thank you to our sponsors Chinaccelerator and People-Squared and to our crew, Darren, David, Qi, and Chrystal.</p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Fri, 25 Mar 2016 00:37:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Todd Embley, Ryan Shuken)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Buckle up as we welcome one of China's top entrepreneurs David Chen, CEO of Strikingly.com. Having quit Goldman Sachs and his studies at the University of Chicago, despite his parent's wishes to the contrary, David never gave up on his dream and followed it to Silicon Valley despite not getting into Y-Combinator on his first attempt.</p>
<p>David has very much followed the Lean Start-up methodology in his rise to fame. He shares valuable insights on his own lean path to success, eventually landing a spot in Y-Combinator, one of the world's most renowned accelerator programs in Silicon Valley. David never gave up, admitting this was one of the key attributes top accelerators like Y-Combinator look for in founders. We hope you enjoy.</p>
<p>A huge thank you to our sponsors Chinaccelerator and People-Squared and to our crew, Darren, David, Qi, and Chrystal.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>Crowdsourcing, co-founders and the first Chinese start-up to be accepted to Y-Combinator.</itunes:title>
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      <itunes:duration>00:46:56</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>Buckle up as we welcome one of China&apos;s top entrepreneurs David Chen, CEO of Strikingly.com. Having quit Goldman Sachs and his studies at the University of Chicago, despite his parent&apos;s wishes to the contrary, David never gave up on his dream and followed it to Silicon Valley despite not getting into Y-Combinator on his first attempt.</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>Buckle up as we welcome one of China&apos;s top entrepreneurs David Chen, CEO of Strikingly.com. Having quit Goldman Sachs and his studies at the University of Chicago, despite his parent&apos;s wishes to the contrary, David never gave up on his dream and followed it to Silicon Valley despite not getting into Y-Combinator on his first attempt.</itunes:subtitle>
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      <title>Investing in Humanity - with Sean O&apos;Sullivan, Managing Director of SOSV the Accelerator VC</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>A treat for the China Startup Pulse as we welcome the man behind one of the most successful VC funds in the world. Sean tells us about his passion for music, engineering and humanitarian work as well as MapInfo, Sean's first start-up that put street mapping on personal computers (that subsequently went IPO).</p>
<p>Sean talks about his experience launching Chinaccelerator, the first start-up accelerator in China and his broader goals with SOSV. Innovating on previous VC models, Sean launched a series of global accelerators and is a key industry thought leader and investor in entrepreneurial ecosystems.</p>
<p>A huge thank you to our sponsors Chinaccelerator and People-Squared and to our crew, Darren, David, Qi, and our newest member Chrystal.</p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Tue, 15 Mar 2016 09:10:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Chinaccelerator)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>A treat for the China Startup Pulse as we welcome the man behind one of the most successful VC funds in the world. Sean tells us about his passion for music, engineering and humanitarian work as well as MapInfo, Sean's first start-up that put street mapping on personal computers (that subsequently went IPO).</p>
<p>Sean talks about his experience launching Chinaccelerator, the first start-up accelerator in China and his broader goals with SOSV. Innovating on previous VC models, Sean launched a series of global accelerators and is a key industry thought leader and investor in entrepreneurial ecosystems.</p>
<p>A huge thank you to our sponsors Chinaccelerator and People-Squared and to our crew, Darren, David, Qi, and our newest member Chrystal.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>Investing in Humanity - with Sean O&apos;Sullivan, Managing Director of SOSV the Accelerator VC</itunes:title>
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      <itunes:summary>A treat for the China Startup Pulse as we welcome the man behind one of the most successful VC funds in the world. Sean tells us about his passion for music, engineering and humanitarian work as well as MapInfo, Sean&apos;s first start-up that put street mapping on personal computers (that subsequently went IPO).</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>A treat for the China Startup Pulse as we welcome the man behind one of the most successful VC funds in the world. Sean tells us about his passion for music, engineering and humanitarian work as well as MapInfo, Sean&apos;s first start-up that put street mapping on personal computers (that subsequently went IPO).</itunes:subtitle>
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      <title>Power networking with female founder and future leader - Stephany Zoo</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>Stephany Zoo joins us on this week's show bringing energy and insight to the art of networking. Founder of The League of Extraordinary Women, Co-Founder of BUNDSHOP, Founding Partner of LeagueX, SH Director of UN Charter School World Acadamy for the Future of Women, (the list continues)...we dip into a variety of topics to hear about Stephany's vast experiences.</p>
<p>You can learn a lot! From keeping tabs on people while maintaining a wide network, setting up a business in China and pursuing a passion for females and leadership. Stephany is proof that, &quot;experience doesn't come with age. Experience comes with doing things, trying things or even thinking things!&quot; Listen here to find out why...</p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Tue, 8 Mar 2016 08:08:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Chinaccelerator)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Stephany Zoo joins us on this week's show bringing energy and insight to the art of networking. Founder of The League of Extraordinary Women, Co-Founder of BUNDSHOP, Founding Partner of LeagueX, SH Director of UN Charter School World Acadamy for the Future of Women, (the list continues)...we dip into a variety of topics to hear about Stephany's vast experiences.</p>
<p>You can learn a lot! From keeping tabs on people while maintaining a wide network, setting up a business in China and pursuing a passion for females and leadership. Stephany is proof that, &quot;experience doesn't come with age. Experience comes with doing things, trying things or even thinking things!&quot; Listen here to find out why...</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>Power networking with female founder and future leader - Stephany Zoo</itunes:title>
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      <itunes:summary>Stephany Zoo joins us on this week&apos;s show bringing energy and insight to the art of networking. Founder of The League of Extraordinary Women, Co-Founder of BUNDSHOP, Founding Partner of LeagueX, SH Director of UN Charter School World Acadamy for the Future of Women, (the list continues)...we dip into a variety of topics to hear about Stephany&apos;s vast experiences.</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>Stephany Zoo joins us on this week&apos;s show bringing energy and insight to the art of networking. Founder of The League of Extraordinary Women, Co-Founder of BUNDSHOP, Founding Partner of LeagueX, SH Director of UN Charter School World Acadamy for the Future of Women, (the list continues)...we dip into a variety of topics to hear about Stephany&apos;s vast experiences.</itunes:subtitle>
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      <title>Cocktails, coding and coaching - How to run a sucessful IT business in China.</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>On this week's podcast we welcome Stephane Monsallier, a coder since the age of 10. After leaving France in 2003, Stephane setup System in Motion - an IT solutions business here in Shanghai.</p>
<p>How does Stephane stay ahead in IT? We talk about the strong management and coaching culture in his organisation and how this leads to high levels of staff retention. Be prepared to learn a new time management technique - useful not just for business but in everyday life!</p>
<p>A huge thank you to our sponsors Chinaccelerator and People Squared, and to our team!</p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Thu, 25 Feb 2016 00:30:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Chinaccelerator)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>On this week's podcast we welcome Stephane Monsallier, a coder since the age of 10. After leaving France in 2003, Stephane setup System in Motion - an IT solutions business here in Shanghai.</p>
<p>How does Stephane stay ahead in IT? We talk about the strong management and coaching culture in his organisation and how this leads to high levels of staff retention. Be prepared to learn a new time management technique - useful not just for business but in everyday life!</p>
<p>A huge thank you to our sponsors Chinaccelerator and People Squared, and to our team!</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>Cocktails, coding and coaching - How to run a sucessful IT business in China.</itunes:title>
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      <description><![CDATA[This week we talk with local entrepreneur Natasha Fang, Founder of the upstart digital marketing agency Tolmao Group in Shanghai discussing channels beyond WeChat and which you should consider and why.

One key topic was why only marketing online isn't enough. Tolmao Group promotes event marketing to grow brands and build a following offline, and Natasha shares some local knowledge on a marketers guide for multi-tier cities in China. 
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Sat, 13 Feb 2016 15:40:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Chinaccelerator)</author>
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      <itunes:title>Digital Marketing in China - going beyond WeChat</itunes:title>
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      <itunes:duration>00:41:35</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>This week we talk with local entrepreneur Natasha Fang, Founder of the upstart digital marketing agency Tolmao Group in Shanghai discussing channels beyond WeChat and which you should consider and why.

One key topic was why only marketing online isn&apos;t enough. Tolmao Group promotes event marketing to grow brands and build a following offline, and Natasha shares some local knowledge on a marketers guide for multi-tier cities in China.</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>This week we talk with local entrepreneur Natasha Fang, Founder of the upstart digital marketing agency Tolmao Group in Shanghai discussing channels beyond WeChat and which you should consider and why.

One key topic was why only marketing online isn&apos;t enough. Tolmao Group promotes event marketing to grow brands and build a following offline, and Natasha shares some local knowledge on a marketers guide for multi-tier cities in China.</itunes:subtitle>
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      <description><![CDATA[In this episode we talk with Andrew Collins, CEO of Mailman Group and one of Shanghai's most successful entrepreneurs. After moving to Shanghai in 2006 and acquiring The Mailman Group, Andrew has turned it into a leading digital, social media and investment group in China. Andrew also shares his stories about launching their new ventures KAWO and Shopilist via Mailman Ventures.  

We also have a very special announcement by Andrew and the KAWO team regarding their latest product release and in the spirit of supporting local startups and entrepreneurs in China, will be giving it away FOR FREE! Details inside so get listening! 
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Thu, 4 Feb 2016 13:39:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Chinaccelerator)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
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      <itunes:title>Who needs a plan when you&apos;ve got a big bag of hustle?!</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Chinaccelerator</itunes:author>
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      <itunes:duration>00:43:20</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>In this episode we talk with Andrew Collins, CEO of Mailman Group and one of Shanghai&apos;s most successful entrepreneurs. After moving to Shanghai in 2006 and acquiring The Mailman Group, Andrew has turned it into a leading digital, social media and investment group in China. Andrew also shares his stories about launching their new ventures KAWO and Shopilist via Mailman Ventures.  

We also have a very special announcement by Andrew and the KAWO team regarding their latest product release and in the spirit of supporting local startups and entrepreneurs in China, will be giving it away FOR FREE! Details inside so get listening!</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>In this episode we talk with Andrew Collins, CEO of Mailman Group and one of Shanghai&apos;s most successful entrepreneurs. After moving to Shanghai in 2006 and acquiring The Mailman Group, Andrew has turned it into a leading digital, social media and investment group in China. Andrew also shares his stories about launching their new ventures KAWO and Shopilist via Mailman Ventures.  

We also have a very special announcement by Andrew and the KAWO team regarding their latest product release and in the spirit of supporting local startups and entrepreneurs in China, will be giving it away FOR FREE! Details inside so get listening!</itunes:subtitle>
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      <title>&quot;Maker to Market&quot; - China&apos;s spin on the maker movement, with the legendary David Li</title>
      <description><![CDATA[In this episode, we chat with David Li, the founder of China’s first Makerspace Xinchejian and the co-founder of the think-tank focusing on technological production Hacked Matter. Over the past 20 years, David has started several open source software projects and contributed to many others.

David shares his insights on the maker-manufacturer scene in China – a particular type of grassroots innovation led by makers and Shanzhai manufacturers through informal and open source systems. The term Shanzhai originally referred to cheap copy cats of brand products and particularly mobile phones in China’s hardware manufacturing center Shenzhen, but as David argues, has become way beyond copying. 
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Tue, 26 Jan 2016 00:30:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Chinaccelerator)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
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      <itunes:title>&quot;Maker to Market&quot; - China&apos;s spin on the maker movement, with the legendary David Li</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Chinaccelerator</itunes:author>
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      <itunes:duration>00:42:52</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>In this episode, we chat with David Li, the founder of China’s first Makerspace Xinchejian and the co-founder of the think-tank focusing on technological production Hacked Matter. Over the past 20 years, David has started several open source software projects and contributed to many others.

David shares his insights on the maker-manufacturer scene in China – a particular type of grassroots innovation led by makers and Shanzhai manufacturers through informal and open source systems. The term Shanzhai originally referred to cheap copy cats of brand products and particularly mobile phones in China’s hardware manufacturing center Shenzhen, but as David argues, has become way beyond copying.</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>In this episode, we chat with David Li, the founder of China’s first Makerspace Xinchejian and the co-founder of the think-tank focusing on technological production Hacked Matter. Over the past 20 years, David has started several open source software projects and contributed to many others.

David shares his insights on the maker-manufacturer scene in China – a particular type of grassroots innovation led by makers and Shanzhai manufacturers through informal and open source systems. The term Shanzhai originally referred to cheap copy cats of brand products and particularly mobile phones in China’s hardware manufacturing center Shenzhen, but as David argues, has become way beyond copying.</itunes:subtitle>
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      <title>In with the Old, Out with the New! With guest Bunny Yan, founder and CEO of Squirrelz.</title>
      <description><![CDATA[Ever heard of upcycling? Neither had we! Today we talk with Bunny Yan and learn about her story of selling upcycled products offline to online. Bunny discusses how she tailors her pitch while "talking social" to VC's in China. How about running a multi-cultural team? Discover the benefits and challanges of having an International team while doing business in China. 
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Mon, 18 Jan 2016 23:46:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Chinaccelerator)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
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      <itunes:title>In with the Old, Out with the New! With guest Bunny Yan, founder and CEO of Squirrelz.</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Chinaccelerator</itunes:author>
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      <itunes:duration>00:42:14</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>Ever heard of upcycling? Neither had we! Today we talk with Bunny Yan and learn about her story of selling upcycled products offline to online. Bunny discusses how she tailors her pitch while &quot;talking social&quot; to VC&apos;s in China. How about running a multi-cultural team? Discover the benefits and challanges of having an International team while doing business in China.</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>Ever heard of upcycling? Neither had we! Today we talk with Bunny Yan and learn about her story of selling upcycled products offline to online. Bunny discusses how she tailors her pitch while &quot;talking social&quot; to VC&apos;s in China. How about running a multi-cultural team? Discover the benefits and challanges of having an International team while doing business in China.</itunes:subtitle>
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      <title>The elusive secret to creating killer content with Willie Chou, Co-founder and CEO of NeoNan.com</title>
      <description><![CDATA[In this episode Willie Chou shares with us the secret weapon that makes NeoNan the largest male fitness and lifestyle online resource in China. We also discuss whether virality is random, whether premium content is scalable and how he and his co-founder Mike Yang use gamification to engage and motivate employees. 
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Tue, 12 Jan 2016 01:12:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Chinaccelerator)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
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      <itunes:title>The elusive secret to creating killer content with Willie Chou, Co-founder and CEO of NeoNan.com</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Chinaccelerator</itunes:author>
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      <itunes:duration>00:48:34</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>In this episode Willie Chou shares with us the secret weapon that makes NeoNan the largest male fitness and lifestyle online resource in China. We also discuss whether virality is random, whether premium content is scalable and how he and his co-founder Mike Yang use gamification to engage and motivate employees.</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>In this episode Willie Chou shares with us the secret weapon that makes NeoNan the largest male fitness and lifestyle online resource in China. We also discuss whether virality is random, whether premium content is scalable and how he and his co-founder Mike Yang use gamification to engage and motivate employees.</itunes:subtitle>
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      <title>Raising a startup in China with mom-trepreneur Hong Cheng, Founder and CEO of Uparenting</title>
      <description><![CDATA[Is raising a child and founding a startup at the same time even possible?  Serial entrepreneur Hong Cheng discusses with us what it takes to be a mom-trepreneur and how she’s able to balance spending time with her family whilst building an empire.

Uparenting is a mobile platform connecting parents and professional parenting practitioners, to source trusted, tailored, and real-time solutions for daily parenting advice.  As an experienced and successful business women, Hong also shares with us her secrets to hiring, managing and retaining talents. 
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Tue, 5 Jan 2016 00:05:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Chinaccelerator)</author>
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      <itunes:title>Raising a startup in China with mom-trepreneur Hong Cheng, Founder and CEO of Uparenting</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Chinaccelerator</itunes:author>
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      <itunes:duration>00:36:19</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>Is raising a child and founding a startup at the same time even possible?  Serial entrepreneur Hong Cheng discusses with us what it takes to be a mom-trepreneur and how she’s able to balance spending time with her family whilst building an empire.

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      <itunes:subtitle>Is raising a child and founding a startup at the same time even possible?  Serial entrepreneur Hong Cheng discusses with us what it takes to be a mom-trepreneur and how she’s able to balance spending time with her family whilst building an empire.

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      <title>Is the Holy Grail of marketing simply not marketing at all? This and more with world class word-of-mouth marketing expert Sina Farzaneh.</title>
      <description><![CDATA[In this episode, we sit down with China’s word-of-mouth marketing expert Sina Farzaneh to discuss how brands can grow organically by studying and engaging customers systematically. 

In 2010 Sina co-founded Advocacy, a marketing agency that helps identify and activate brand advocates for consumer goods companies. He is currently working on his new venture PullPath, a software platform to bring what he’s built at Advocacy to a grassroots level.

We also discuss the advantage of word-of-mouth over traditional marketing methods, differences between doing marketing in Silicon Valley and China, and the role human behavioral understanding can play in technology advancement. 
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Tue, 22 Dec 2015 01:15:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Chinaccelerator)</author>
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      <itunes:title>Is the Holy Grail of marketing simply not marketing at all? This and more with world class word-of-mouth marketing expert Sina Farzaneh.</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Chinaccelerator</itunes:author>
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      <itunes:duration>00:40:29</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>In this episode, we sit down with China’s word-of-mouth marketing expert Sina Farzaneh to discuss how brands can grow organically by studying and engaging customers systematically. 

In 2010 Sina co-founded Advocacy, a marketing agency that helps identify and activate brand advocates for consumer goods companies. He is currently working on his new venture PullPath, a software platform to bring what he’s built at Advocacy to a grassroots level.

We also discuss the advantage of word-of-mouth over traditional marketing methods, differences between doing marketing in Silicon Valley and China, and the role human behavioral understanding can play in technology advancement.</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>In this episode, we sit down with China’s word-of-mouth marketing expert Sina Farzaneh to discuss how brands can grow organically by studying and engaging customers systematically. 

In 2010 Sina co-founded Advocacy, a marketing agency that helps identify and activate brand advocates for consumer goods companies. He is currently working on his new venture PullPath, a software platform to bring what he’s built at Advocacy to a grassroots level.

We also discuss the advantage of word-of-mouth over traditional marketing methods, differences between doing marketing in Silicon Valley and China, and the role human behavioral understanding can play in technology advancement.</itunes:subtitle>
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      <title>Raising an entrepreneur regardless of gender, with podcast superstar Jenny Zhu</title>
      <description><![CDATA[We bring on the show our first female guest Jenny Zhu, who was the voice behind the iconic Chinese learning podcast ChinesePod. Jenny is now working on her new venture OpenLanguage to help young Chinese learn English using engaging audio and video content. 

In this episode we discuss the gender imbalance in entrepreneurship and Chinese parents’ influence on their children's career choices. Jenny also shares with us lessons she learned building and growing OpenLanguage and the importance of going local and mobile. 
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Wed, 16 Dec 2015 11:21:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Chinaccelerator)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
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      <itunes:title>Raising an entrepreneur regardless of gender, with podcast superstar Jenny Zhu</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Chinaccelerator</itunes:author>
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      <itunes:duration>00:44:55</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>We bring on the show our first female guest Jenny Zhu, who was the voice behind the iconic Chinese learning podcast ChinesePod. Jenny is now working on her new venture OpenLanguage to help young Chinese learn English using engaging audio and video content. 

In this episode we discuss the gender imbalance in entrepreneurship and Chinese parents’ influence on their children&apos;s career choices. Jenny also shares with us lessons she learned building and growing OpenLanguage and the importance of going local and mobile.</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>We bring on the show our first female guest Jenny Zhu, who was the voice behind the iconic Chinese learning podcast ChinesePod. Jenny is now working on her new venture OpenLanguage to help young Chinese learn English using engaging audio and video content. 

In this episode we discuss the gender imbalance in entrepreneurship and Chinese parents’ influence on their children&apos;s career choices. Jenny also shares with us lessons she learned building and growing OpenLanguage and the importance of going local and mobile.</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>china, startup, entrepreneur, podcast, gender, female</itunes:keywords>
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      <title>From mini golf to Kickstarter - the power of storytelling; with serial entrepreneur Joe Constanty</title>
      <description><![CDATA[Joe Constanty is the co-founder of THE UT.LAB, a technology driven footwear brand designed in Shanghai and sold globally, initially through Kickstarter. UT.LAB’s first Kickstarter campaign back in 2013 was the most successful footwear campaign ever and launched an entire new category for footwear brands on the Kickstarter platform. 

We also discuss why crowdfunding in China is radically different than in the West. We wrap with Joe sharing his new project called Purple Spread and what the local startup ecosystem can look forward to from Next Step. 
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Tue, 8 Dec 2015 16:40:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Chinaccelerator)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
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      <itunes:title>From mini golf to Kickstarter - the power of storytelling; with serial entrepreneur Joe Constanty</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Chinaccelerator</itunes:author>
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      <itunes:duration>00:39:40</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>Joe Constanty is the co-founder of THE UT.LAB, a technology driven footwear brand designed in Shanghai and sold globally, initially through Kickstarter. UT.LAB’s first Kickstarter campaign back in 2013 was the most successful footwear campaign ever and launched an entire new category for footwear brands on the Kickstarter platform. 

We also discuss why crowdfunding in China is radically different than in the West. We wrap with Joe sharing his new project called Purple Spread and what the local startup ecosystem can look forward to from Next Step.</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>Joe Constanty is the co-founder of THE UT.LAB, a technology driven footwear brand designed in Shanghai and sold globally, initially through Kickstarter. UT.LAB’s first Kickstarter campaign back in 2013 was the most successful footwear campaign ever and launched an entire new category for footwear brands on the Kickstarter platform. 

We also discuss why crowdfunding in China is radically different than in the West. We wrap with Joe sharing his new project called Purple Spread and what the local startup ecosystem can look forward to from Next Step.</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>china, startup, entrepreneur, kickstarter, crowdfunding</itunes:keywords>
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      <title>The Great Wall of “guanxi” – Doing business the Chinese way with serial entrepreneur Alvin Wang Graylin</title>
      <description><![CDATA[Understand China’s “guanxi” (social connections and relationships) culture, what it takes and how to capitalize on it with seasoned technology entrepreneur Alvin Wang Graylin. Alvin is the CEO and Founder of mobile social networking platform Guanxi Inc. and has over 20 years of business management experience in the technology industry, including 15 years in Greater China.  
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Thu, 3 Dec 2015 01:28:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Chinaccelerator)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
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      <itunes:title>The Great Wall of “guanxi” – Doing business the Chinese way with serial entrepreneur Alvin Wang Graylin</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Chinaccelerator</itunes:author>
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      <itunes:duration>00:33:45</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>Understand China’s “guanxi” (social connections and relationships) culture, what it takes and how to capitalize on it with seasoned technology entrepreneur Alvin Wang Graylin. Alvin is the CEO and Founder of mobile social networking platform Guanxi Inc. and has over 20 years of business management experience in the technology industry, including 15 years in Greater China. </itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>Understand China’s “guanxi” (social connections and relationships) culture, what it takes and how to capitalize on it with seasoned technology entrepreneur Alvin Wang Graylin. Alvin is the CEO and Founder of mobile social networking platform Guanxi Inc. and has over 20 years of business management experience in the technology industry, including 15 years in Greater China. </itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>social connections, china, guanxi, startup, entrepreneur, business</itunes:keywords>
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      <title>China’s mobile revolution with Justin Mallen, Founder &amp; CEO of Silk Road Technologies</title>
      <description><![CDATA[In this episode we chat with Justin Mallen, the Founder and CEO of Silk Road Technologies, a Hangzhou-based corporate telecommunication services provider.  The company builds data center for Alibaba, which processed $5 billion in sales online in the first 90 minutes of China’s Black Friday on November 11.

Justin came to China 23 years ago and has been building businesses since then.  As the sixth internet user in China, Justin discusses how China has developed from zero internet connectivity to an ecosystem taken over by smart phones and apps.  
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Tue, 24 Nov 2015 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Chinaccelerator)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
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      <itunes:title>China’s mobile revolution with Justin Mallen, Founder &amp; CEO of Silk Road Technologies</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Chinaccelerator</itunes:author>
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      <itunes:duration>00:39:11</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>In this episode we chat with Justin Mallen, the Founder and CEO of Silk Road Technologies, a Hangzhou-based corporate telecommunication services provider.  The company builds data center for Alibaba, which processed $5 billion in sales online in the first 90 minutes of China’s Black Friday on November 11.

Justin came to China 23 years ago and has been building businesses since then.  As the sixth internet user in China, Justin discusses how China has developed from zero internet connectivity to an ecosystem taken over by smart phones and apps. </itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>In this episode we chat with Justin Mallen, the Founder and CEO of Silk Road Technologies, a Hangzhou-based corporate telecommunication services provider.  The company builds data center for Alibaba, which processed $5 billion in sales online in the first 90 minutes of China’s Black Friday on November 11.

Justin came to China 23 years ago and has been building businesses since then.  As the sixth internet user in China, Justin discusses how China has developed from zero internet connectivity to an ecosystem taken over by smart phones and apps. </itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>china, mobile, startup, entrepreneur, telecommunication</itunes:keywords>
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      <title>How to enter China – Everything about China’s startup ecosystem and VC scene with William Bao Bean of SOSV &amp; Chinaccelerator</title>
      <description><![CDATA[Check out our latest episode with William Bao Bean, a Partner at SOSV and the Managing Director of Chinaccelerator, the first startup accelerator in the East and sponsor of China Startup Pulse. 

William shared his insights on the startup and investment scene in China and what it takes for foreign or global startups to succeed in China. We also discussed WeChat being a useful tool to engage customers or users with very low acquisition cost. This is a must-listen episode for those of you who are trying to understand what’s really going on here and how it is different from the West. 
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Thu, 19 Nov 2015 02:42:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Chinaccelerator)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
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      <itunes:title>How to enter China – Everything about China’s startup ecosystem and VC scene with William Bao Bean of SOSV &amp; Chinaccelerator</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Chinaccelerator</itunes:author>
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      <itunes:duration>00:47:10</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>Check out our latest episode with William Bao Bean, a Partner at SOSV and the Managing Director of Chinaccelerator, the first startup accelerator in the East and sponsor of China Startup Pulse. 

William shared his insights on the startup and investment scene in China and what it takes for foreign or global startups to succeed in China. We also discussed WeChat being a useful tool to engage customers or users with very low acquisition cost. This is a must-listen episode for those of you who are trying to understand what’s really going on here and how it is different from the West.</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>Check out our latest episode with William Bao Bean, a Partner at SOSV and the Managing Director of Chinaccelerator, the first startup accelerator in the East and sponsor of China Startup Pulse. 

William shared his insights on the startup and investment scene in China and what it takes for foreign or global startups to succeed in China. We also discussed WeChat being a useful tool to engage customers or users with very low acquisition cost. This is a must-listen episode for those of you who are trying to understand what’s really going on here and how it is different from the West.</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>china, startup, venture capital</itunes:keywords>
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      <title>Hiring and retaining talent, enterprise selling, and data science (big data 2.0)</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>A knowledge-filled episode with serial entrepreneur Jacob Cooke, founder and CEO of Web Presence in China. Launched in 2009, Web Presence is a full service digital marketing and technology agency based in Beijing. Jacob talks about why he chooses to spend more than his competition on hiring and training, the value of hiring female staff, the future of data science (big data) in China and touches on how to sell B2B in China.</p>
<p>Special thanks to our producer Qi Liu and our post production David Chen.</p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Fri, 13 Nov 2015 05:42:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Chinaccelerator)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>A knowledge-filled episode with serial entrepreneur Jacob Cooke, founder and CEO of Web Presence in China. Launched in 2009, Web Presence is a full service digital marketing and technology agency based in Beijing. Jacob talks about why he chooses to spend more than his competition on hiring and training, the value of hiring female staff, the future of data science (big data) in China and touches on how to sell B2B in China.</p>
<p>Special thanks to our producer Qi Liu and our post production David Chen.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>Hiring and retaining talent, enterprise selling, and data science (big data 2.0)</itunes:title>
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      <itunes:duration>00:37:52</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>A knowledge-filled episode with serial entrepreneur Jacob Cooke, founder and CEO of Web Presence in China. Launched in 2009, Web Presence is a full service digital marketing and technology agency based in Beijing. Jacob talks about why he chooses to spend more than his competition on hiring and training, the value of hiring female staff, the future of data science (big data) in China and touches on how to sell B2B in China. </itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>A knowledge-filled episode with serial entrepreneur Jacob Cooke, founder and CEO of Web Presence in China. Launched in 2009, Web Presence is a full service digital marketing and technology agency based in Beijing. Jacob talks about why he chooses to spend more than his competition on hiring and training, the value of hiring female staff, the future of data science (big data) in China and touches on how to sell B2B in China. </itunes:subtitle>
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      <title>Work 3.0, the secret sauce behind a successful co-working space, and discussing the differing ecosystems across the PRC, with Bob Zheng, founder and CEO of People Squared</title>
      <description><![CDATA[In this episode we caught up with Shanghai’s co-working space superstar Bob Zheng, the founder and CEO of People Squared (sponsor of The China Startup Pulse). Bob discusses how People Squared got started, it's  rapid growth over the last few years and what the future holds. We also discuss the evolution of China's startup culture, the revolution around the way people are working here, and where to be based on the vertical you are innovating in.  
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Tue, 3 Nov 2015 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Chinaccelerator)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
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      <itunes:title>Work 3.0, the secret sauce behind a successful co-working space, and discussing the differing ecosystems across the PRC, with Bob Zheng, founder and CEO of People Squared</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Chinaccelerator</itunes:author>
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      <itunes:duration>00:42:42</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>In this episode we caught up with Shanghai’s co-working space superstar Bob Zheng, the founder and CEO of People Squared (sponsor of The China Startup Pulse). Bob discusses how People Squared got started, it&apos;s  rapid growth over the last few years and what the future holds. We also discuss the evolution of China&apos;s startup culture, the revolution around the way people are working here, and where to be based on the vertical you are innovating in. </itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>In this episode we caught up with Shanghai’s co-working space superstar Bob Zheng, the founder and CEO of People Squared (sponsor of The China Startup Pulse). Bob discusses how People Squared got started, it&apos;s  rapid growth over the last few years and what the future holds. We also discuss the evolution of China&apos;s startup culture, the revolution around the way people are working here, and where to be based on the vertical you are innovating in. </itunes:subtitle>
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      <title>Banking on startups in China. We discuss Silicon Valley Bank&apos;s entry into China, internet banks, and the option of venture debt vs equity financing with Arman Zand founding partner at Red Lion Capital</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>In this episode we talk with Arman Zand founder of Red Lion Capital. He gives us a lay of the land for investments in startups in China. We learn how  Silicon Valley Bank built their legacy in China and his thoughts on the opportunity of venture debt capital for businesses in China.</p>
<p>A special thanks to our producer Qi Liu and editor David Chen.</p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Wed, 28 Oct 2015 08:41:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Chinaccelerator)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>In this episode we talk with Arman Zand founder of Red Lion Capital. He gives us a lay of the land for investments in startups in China. We learn how  Silicon Valley Bank built their legacy in China and his thoughts on the opportunity of venture debt capital for businesses in China.</p>
<p>A special thanks to our producer Qi Liu and editor David Chen.</p>
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      <itunes:title>Banking on startups in China. We discuss Silicon Valley Bank&apos;s entry into China, internet banks, and the option of venture debt vs equity financing with Arman Zand founding partner at Red Lion Capital</itunes:title>
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      <itunes:summary>Investment pro-tips with Armand Zand founding partner of Red Lion Capital. We learn what&apos;s it like investing in China right now, how to you build your network for investment and what opportunities can you find in the current market. </itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>Investment pro-tips with Armand Zand founding partner of Red Lion Capital. We learn what&apos;s it like investing in China right now, how to you build your network for investment and what opportunities can you find in the current market. </itunes:subtitle>
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      <title>Brewing up an F&amp;B empire; going local and ever evolving with our guest Lee Tseng, founder of Boxing Cat Brewery and Liquid Laundry</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>In this episode, we chat with Lee Tseng, founder of Boxing Cat Brewery and Liquid Laundry about the changing market dynamic in China, how to cater a western-style service to a local taste and benefits of working with strong female entrepreneurs .</p>
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      <pubDate>Tue, 20 Oct 2015 07:30:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Chinaccelerator)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>In this episode, we chat with Lee Tseng, founder of Boxing Cat Brewery and Liquid Laundry about the changing market dynamic in China, how to cater a western-style service to a local taste and benefits of working with strong female entrepreneurs .</p>
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      <itunes:title>Brewing up an F&amp;B empire; going local and ever evolving with our guest Lee Tseng, founder of Boxing Cat Brewery and Liquid Laundry</itunes:title>
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      <itunes:duration>00:37:34</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>In this episode, we chat with Lee Tseng, founder of Boxing Cat Brewery and Liquid Laundry about the changing market dynamic in China, how to cater a western-style service to a local taste and benefits of working with strong female entrepreneurs .</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>In this episode, we chat with Lee Tseng, founder of Boxing Cat Brewery and Liquid Laundry about the changing market dynamic in China, how to cater a western-style service to a local taste and benefits of working with strong female entrepreneurs .</itunes:subtitle>
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      <title>Dragons in the East, WeChat, and cutting through red tape with guest Andrew Schorr, founder of Grata.</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>In this episode we chat with Andrew Schorr from Grata the WeChat product services platform. We learn what a content marketing success on social media looks like and the challenges of starting a business in China.</p>
<p>Brought to you by co-hosts Todd Embley and Ryan Shuken and Production Manager Qi Liu, the China Startup Pulse is designed to offer advice and insights into the startup world in China for those either outside China looking in, or already here but looking at jumping off the entrepreneurial cliff for the first time. This podcast is in English. Enjoy!</p>
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      <pubDate>Wed, 14 Oct 2015 00:43:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Chinaccelerator)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>In this episode we chat with Andrew Schorr from Grata the WeChat product services platform. We learn what a content marketing success on social media looks like and the challenges of starting a business in China.</p>
<p>Brought to you by co-hosts Todd Embley and Ryan Shuken and Production Manager Qi Liu, the China Startup Pulse is designed to offer advice and insights into the startup world in China for those either outside China looking in, or already here but looking at jumping off the entrepreneurial cliff for the first time. This podcast is in English. Enjoy!</p>
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      <description><![CDATA[<p>Welcome to the first episode of ​The ​China​ ​Startup​ ​Pulse. ​We kicked off with a great chat with Phillip Beck, a China startup ​guru​ with over 15 years of experience running and mentoring startups in China. ​We discuss the ​startup culture in China, how ​'​entrepreneurial ​minded' ​china is​ or isn't​, ​and delve into some ​lessons ​learned ​from Phillip​'​s ​own past mistakes and missteps.​ Enjoy!</p>
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      <pubDate>Mon, 21 Sep 2015 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>comms@orbitstartups.com (Ryan Shuken, Todd Embley)</author>
      <link>https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/china-startup-pulse/id1033021352?mt=2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Welcome to the first episode of ​The ​China​ ​Startup​ ​Pulse. ​We kicked off with a great chat with Phillip Beck, a China startup ​guru​ with over 15 years of experience running and mentoring startups in China. ​We discuss the ​startup culture in China, how ​'​entrepreneurial ​minded' ​china is​ or isn't​, ​and delve into some ​lessons ​learned ​from Phillip​'​s ​own past mistakes and missteps.​ Enjoy!</p>
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      <itunes:title>China, Volcanos, Sharks and Startups with guest Phillip Beck</itunes:title>
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