China Phone Industry Bckground

Download as pdf or txt
Download as pdf or txt
You are on page 1of 29

The Evolution of China’s Mobile Phone Industry and Good-enough

Innovation

Shin-Horng Chen and Pei-Chang Wen


Chung-Hua Institution for Economic Research, Taiwan

Abstract

This paper examines the evolution of China’s mobile phone industry, with a special
focus on the effect of migration to smartphones on the industrial ecosystem and
industrial transformation. The Chinese market was dominated not long ago by
Shanzhai handset makers, which were often associated with notorious companies
that engaged in banditry, piracy, and illegal network access. However, in the
migration from 2G to 3G and smartphones in China, a few home-grown brands have
become the leading suppliers of smartphones, outperforming international premium
brands such as Nokia, Motorola and even Apple. Through an intensive case study of
the rise of Chinese smartphone brands, the paper assesses the significance of layered
platform-based development in the migration towards smartphones and mobile
digital services. In addition, the paper discusses a co-evolution process of social and
market factors, entailing the looped interaction between the two, in shaping Chinese
“good-enough innovations”, to highlight the role of distinct demands in the Chinese
market and the growing popularity of mobile internet services within Chinese
“walled garden” with heavy regulations and censorship. Moreover, the paper
discusses the role of industrial standards in the Chinese migration to smartphones,
by referring to a “three-level model for standards and innovation in ICT”, including
the infrastructure, middleware (service platform) and application levels. In short,
China’s home-grown 3G standard TD-SCDMA can only be part of Chinese indigenous
solutions for migration towards 3G broadband mobile internet services and
smartphones. In contrast, those at the middleware and application levels are
indispensable and increasingly more important parts of the puzzle as both service
and device has become more application driven than ever. Therefore, China’s quest
for indigenous innovation has to go beyond just the infrastructure level (3G
standards per se), when it comes to migration towards smartphones and broadband
mobile communications services.

Key words: Smartphone, co-evolution of market and technology, mobile phone


industry, platform, good-enough innovation, TD-SCDMA, Shanzhai handset

1
The Evolution of China’s Mobile Phone Industry and Good-enough
Innovation

Shin-Horng Chen and Pei-Chang Wen


Chung-Hua Institution for Economic Research, Taiwan

1. Introduction
The communications industry is a landmark sector for China in terms of innovation.
In this sector, not only have Huawei and ZTE become two leading international
communication equipment manufacturers, but also China has established own
flagship international industrial standard, TD-SCDMA (Time Division-Synchronous
Code Division Multiple Access) for the third generation mobile phone (3G). However,
as late as 2008, China’s market for second generation (2G) mobile communications
devices was dominated by “Shanzhai (also called guerilla) handsets”1, which were
often accused of brand imitation in appearance, design and brand name. The rapid
development of Shanzhai handsets had brought about the progressive expansion of
China’s mobile communications market and enabled an army of local white-box
handset producers to gain a strong market foothold, against leading international
brands and legitimate local brands. In essence, China’s mobile phone sector
development has embodied two distinctive but connected approaches for innovation.
A bottom-up approach was demonstrated by the development of the Shanzhai
handset sector while the government adopted top-down approach to indigenous
innovations through industrial standards and generous official support for a few
national champions, including Tatang, Huawei and China Mobile (Liu and Zhou, 2013).
Researchers have argued that this distinct bottom-up innovation in China had much
to do with a few factors, such as the role of diverse demands from the grassroots,
local proliferation and adaption of the production system, and the cross-strait
innovation network, involving Taiwanese firms such as Mediatek, a leading IC
(Integrated Circuit) design house (Chen, Wen and Tai, 2013; Liu and Chao, 2009;
Sheng and Shi, 2010; Tse, Ma and Huang, 2009). In fact, Shanzhai handsets per se can
be considered as indigenous innovations, stimulated by strong local demands from
the grassroots, particularly those in the lower tiers of the market and entrepreneurial
innovations of the masses. Elsewhere, we (Chen et al., 2013) have argued that out of

1
Shanzhai handset makers were mostly clustered in Shenzhen, Guangdong Province. There,
thousands of small-sized “guerrilla” (at least initially) phone workshops used to form a
comprehensive supply chain, ranging from project designing, software development, assembling,
printing, packaging, logistic distribution to sales and after-sales service. However, the ecosystem of
the Shanzhai handset sector had a much bigger and more meaningful picture than local clustering,
bandit, copy cats and piracy. For detailed discussions on the Chinese way of innovation by Shanzhai
handset makers, see Chen, Wen and Tai (2013).

2
the Shanzhai handset phenomenon, the so-called “Shanzhai Economy” might prevail
with Chinese flavor of innovation, now better termed as “good-enough innovation
(economy)” (see also Brandt and Thun, 2010; Gadiesh, Leung, and Vestring, 2007).

Yet, the situation changed rather dramatically in the migration towards 3G and
smartphones. A few home-grown brands, such as Lenovo, Coolpad, Huawei and ZTE,
have gained strong market foothold in the Chinese market, against not only Shanzhai
handset makers but also their international rivals, like Apple and Nokia, except
Samsung. Of interest to note is the advent and proliferation of low-cost smartphones
with price tags below CNY 2,000 and even around CNY 1,000, smartphones for the
vast market of lower income users in China. On surface, it seems that the emergence
of those Chinese home-grown brands has benefitted from the existence of this
particular market. However, it also has had much to do with the trend of
platform-based development or “platformization” in the migration towards
smartphones and mobile digital services (Eaton, Elaluf-Calderwood, Sørensen, and
Yoo, 2011; Feijóo, Pascu, Misuraca and Lusoli, 2009; Kenney and Pon, 2011), to be
discussed below. Also related are diverse demands in the Chinese market and the
growing popularity of mobile internet services with Chinese versions2 and flavors3.
As a result, there have been profound changes in the Chinese ecosystem of the
smartphone and mobile communications service sectors. Figure 1 shows key
milestones for the evolution of China’s mobile phone and mobile communications
sectors in recent years.

2
Some of the Chinese firms are quite often associated with their counterparts of global leading
players. For example, Baidu is called as “the Google of China”; Taobao as “the e-Bay of China”. In
addition, most of the Chinese use Tencent’s QQ, Sina Weibo or Weixin, instead of Facebook and
Twitter.
3
For example, Xiaomi has launched Phone Flying Car, called FonCar, controlled with Android or Apple
smartphones. For another example, according to an article by Ian Bhullar, “Chinese mobile users
mainly connect to the internet through slower GPRS technology due to the high cost of 3G”. Source:
http://www.maxodyssey.com/chinas-mobile-apps-market-by-china-briefing/. accessed on
2013/5/17.

3
1200
232.8
1000

Millions of subscribers
128.4
47.05
800 3G
2G
600

400
547.3 641.2 747.2 811.95 857.8 879.4
200

0 Year
2G & feature phones Migration towards 3G & smartphones

2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012

The Chinese government China issued 3G licences and the


liberalized licensing regulations operators launched marketing
on the manufacturing and sales of campaigns of low-cost
handsets, allowing Shanzhai smartphones.
players to become legitimate.

Shanzhai handsets captured a market Local brands of smartphones


share of 40%, compared to less than 20% became leading players in the
Source: The authors.
for local brands. Chinese market.
Figure 1 Key Milestones for the Evolution of China’s Mobile Phone and Mobile Communications Sectors in Recent Years

4
As to be shown in the paper, the diverse demand from the grassroots in both spatial
and social terms, particularly those in the lower tiers of the market, is an important
factor underlying the Shanzhai handset phenomenon and the latest development of
the smartphone sector (smartphones for the masses) in China. What’s more, in the
migration from 2G to 3G, both service and device in the mobile communications
sector have become more application driven than ever, bringing about
platform-based development and competition (Ballon, 2009; Ballon and Walravens,
2009; Feijóo et al., 2009; Hammershøj, Sapuppo and Tadayoni, 2009; Tilson,
Sørensen and Lyytinen, 2012), including mobile operating system (OS) platform and
service platform. One hence has to take into account a shift in the source of
competitiveness for mobile phone players from the sphere of architectural design
(the infrastructure level) to that of middleware/service platform (for example,
Apple’s App Store) and applications, as shown in the case of Apple’s rise with iPhone
and iPad. As a result, the Chinese market for smartphones has consolidated to quite
an extent and become more institutionalized than before, at the expense of the
Shanzhai handset makers. Therefore, one has to develop better appreciation of the
role of industrial evolution towards platform-based development and the social and
market factors in shaping the Chinese innovations and industrial ecosystem, going
beyond a simplified view which regards indigenous industrial standards, such as
TD-SCDMA as the key landmark (Liu and Zhou, 2013; Yan, 2007)4.

This paper is structured as follows. In Section 2, against the theoretical backdrop of


the co-evolution of technology and market, we highlight two sets of factors that may
be particularly relevant to China’s migration towards 3G and smartphones: firstly,
platform-based development or “platformization” in the ecosystem; secondly the
role of emerging economy’s market in stimulating good-enough innovation. Section 3
gives an overview on the uptake of 3G mobile communications and smartphones in
China to highlight the rise of a few home-grown brands. Section 4 portrays the new
ecosystem and industrial transformation, resulting from the migration from 2G to 3G
in China, by discussing the key factors and facilitators. Section 5 focuses on the role
of industrial standards in the Chinese migration of smartphones. The paper is
concluded with Section 6, with a main argument that China’s quest for indigenous
innovations and industrial standards has to be viewed in a broader context than just
the infrastructure level, when it comes to migration towards smartphones and
broadband mobile communications services.

4
For example, Liu and Zhou (2013) argue that “TD-SCDMA is now considered a national hero in the IT
industry. It seems that the climate has helped TD-SCDMA to gain favour over existing multinationals
in China in the 3G market, but the technology still faces many uncertainties.”

5
2. The Changing Ecosystem and Chinese Market for the Smartphone Industry
In the field of technology management and innovation, co-evolution of technology
and broader contexts has formed a useful framework (Dosi, 2000) for some
researchers to explore interactions and dynamics of technology in conjunction with
several other factors, such as the society (Geels, 2005), industrial structure (Nelson,
1994) and market (Struben, 2008), on different scales. Among the pioneer of such
studies, Freeman and Perez (1988) coined the term “techno-economic paradigm” to
examine how technology shapes and evolves with the broadly-defined production
system in a longitudinal manner. Underlying this process is the looped interaction
between new technologies and socio-institutional systems (Perez, 1985: 445).
Against the theoretical backdrop of the co-evolution of technology and market, we
intend to examine the evolution of China’s mobile phone industry, with a special
focus on the effect of migration to smartphones on the industrial ecosystem and
industrial transformation.

With consistent and remarkable economic growth over the past three decades, China
has become a manufacturing powerhouse in the world (Holz, 2008). However,
China’s economic development has now reached a new stage that calls for different
policies to promote future prosperity. In addition to policies highlighted in China’s
Twelfth Five-Year Plan, for example the stimulation of domestic demand and
industrial restructuring, China has begun its quest for technological leadership
through the promotion of indigenous innovation (Sigurdson, 2005; Suttmeier and Yao,
2004; Rowen and Hancock, 2008). Indeed, a few indigenous firms, such as Huawei
and ZTE, have managed to catch up on technological ladder by taking advantage of
the domestic market and the distinct feature of the technological regime in the
telecommunications (switching system) industry (Mu and Lee, 2005). In 3G wireless
China’s quest for technological leadership has given a high priority to the
development of an indigenous industrial standard – TD-SCDMA – as a possible
alternative to the two competing global standards, CDMA2000 and W-CDMA (Liu and
Zhou, 2013; Yan, 2007).

Although TD-SCDMA is arguably an achievement for China, its R&D project started in
the mid-1990s, when not many could foresee what specific digital services could be
offered via 3G networks and what this meant to the ecosystem of the mobile
communications services. However, it has nowadays become clearer that for
broadband mobile communications services to prevail and prosper, things other than
the physical network standard, such as TD-SCDMA, are needed. For example,
researchers working for China-European Union Standards project have proposed a

6
“three level model for standards and innovation in ICT”, including the infrastructure,
middleware and applications levels, as shown in Figure 2. In a narrow sense,
middleware is a software platform between the smartphone OS and third party
applications, which can make software OS independent. Sun’s J2ME and Qualcomm’s
BREW are typical examples at issue (Lin and Ye, 2009: 620). In our following analyses,
we tend, as the model was initially intended, to interpret the middleware level in a
broader sense and add service platform to the middleware level, as shown in Figure
2. In addition, applications have become an essential part of the mobile
communications services.

User

Application (Ex. i-mode, games, location-based services)

Middleware/Service platform (Ex. WML, App Store)

Infrastructure (Ex. Architecture design for 3G, 4G,


broadcasting)

Technology

Source: Adapted from China EU Information Technology Standards research partnership.


http://www.china-eu-standards.org/details.htm.

Figure 2 The Three Level Model for Standards and Innovation in ICT

More importantly, smartphones, evolving from feature phones, signify a profound


change from mainly voice telephony terminals to multimedia data communications
and mobile internet devices. As a result, the industrial ecosystem has become more
complex than that for the feature phone and the 2G period. Yoo, Henfridsson and
Lyytinen (2010: 725) have argued that the advent of digital innovation, such as
mobile internet and e-book, has brought about a new type of product architecture:
“the layered modular architecture”, which is a hybrid of the modular architecture of a

7
physical product and the layered architecture of digital technology. The modular
architecture provides a scheme by which a physical product is decomposed into
loosely coupled components, attributed functionality, and interconnected through
prespecified interfaces, while the layered architecture of digital technology is
embedded into physical products, enhancing product functionality with
software-based capabilities. In professional terms of the mobile communications
industry, Yoo et al. (2010) classify layered architecture into four layers: devices,
networks, services, and contents. It is worth mentioning that the revised model
shown in Figure 2 can be considered as a simplified version of the conceptual
framework of Yoo et al. (2010) about the new industrial ecosystem of mobile digital
services.

A typical issue is the mobile OS, such as Google’s Android and Apple’s iOS, which has
become pivotal platforms for creating mobile service ecologies and the proliferation
of new mobile internet services (Ballon, 2009; Ballon and Walravens, 2009;
Hammershøj et al., 2009; Tilson et al., 2012). The owners of those mobile OSs and
service platforms (for example, Apple’s App Store, Google Play and China Mobile’s
Mobile Market) differ in their gatekeeper role for mobile service development and
provisions and network control (Ballon, 2009; Ballon and Walravens, 2009;
Hammershøj et al., 2009), reflecting the way in which they form their strategies, core
competencies and organizational boundaries within the evolving ecosystems (Eaton
et al., 2011; Tilson et al., 2012). In particular, compared to Apple’s strategy of
proprietary platform, iTunes and App Store, and tight control over its relatively closed
ecosystem, Google tends to adopt a hand-off approach and even once publicly
announced that they would welcome Shanzhai handset makers to take advantage of
Android, Google’s free and open-source OS, to develop smartphones (Chen, et al.,
2013). In other words, to understand the developmental dynamics of the Chinese
smartphone and 3G mobile communications service sectors, one needs to look
beyond the hardware part of the ecosystem, as to be discussed below.

Moreover, some recent studies have begun to draw attention to the role of domestic
demand (Christensen, 2003; Brandt and Thun, 2010; Gadiesh et al., 2007; Zhou, 2008)
and entrepreneurs in the non-state sectors (Minagawa, Trott and Hoecht, 2007; Yueh,
2009) in China’s economic and industrial development. For example, Brandt and
Thun (2010) have shown that after China’s accession to the World Trade Organization
(WTO), domestic firms (mostly private ones) in a few (automotive, construction, and
machine tool) sectors are able to compete with well-established foreign firms,
leading to local industrial upgrading. They have done so by taking advantage of the

8
sheer size of the low-end segments and the strong pre-existing capabilities in those
sectors. What is more, in fighting for the middle market, these are able to produce so
called “good-enough” and “reliable-enough products at low-enough prices to attract
the cream of China’s fast-growing cohort of midlevel consumers” (Gadiesh et al.,
2007: 82).

Indeed, China, together with Russia, India and Brazil, has been marked as “emerging
markets”, with distinctive features. In the context of its rapid pace of economic
development, China has been characterized by high income inequity, market diversity,
and high price elasticity of demand as compared to mature markets (Dawar and
Chattopadhyay, 2000; Walters and Samiee, 2003). This suggests that a massive
market space is underserved or cannot be duly served by products developed in the
developed world. Although there is a good portion of Chinese population rich
enough to consume the-state-of-art and premium products as marketed in the
developed world, the Chinese market remains diverse in spatial and social terms,
leaving a much larger cohort of midlevel consumers underserved and underexplored
by premium brands. Prahalad (2005) and Christensen Craig and Hart (2001), were
among the leading authors to draw our attention to innovation and the creation of a
new business model around this spectrum of the underserved market segments in
emerging markets (in Prahalad’s terms, bottom of the pyramid; BOP). In particular,
Christensen et al. (2001) argue that “(e)xactly what kinds of disruptive technologies
might emerge within countries such as India and China cannot be easily extrapolated
from the market needs and success stories of developed economies…. technologies
emerging from these countries may have profound but unpredictable implications for
the rich world’s markets.” Christensen (2003) goes further to highlight disruptive
technologies versus sustaining technologies in the context of BOP innovations. While
disruptive technologies may be considered as “innovations that result in worse
product performance, at least in the near term, but are generally cheaper, simpler,
smaller, and frequently, more convenient to use”, they could be the appropriate
means and playing field for new entrants to serve and expand the lower tiers of the
market overlooked by the incumbents.

In other words, China’s uneven development in both spatial and social terms,
particularly grassroots demand in the lower tiers of the market, matters for the
promotion of indigenous innovations. With the approach to BOP and good-enough
innovation, local firms in China and other emerging markets may be able to set up
their own playing field by taking advantage of specific and underserved local
demands. The authors (Chen et al., 2013) have indeed shown that Shanzhai handsets,

9
which used to dominate the Chinese market, can be considered as an intriguing
aspect of China’s BOP and good-enough innovation. It is, however, an industrial
upgrading process, involving the co-evolution of diverse market demands and
technologies. The paper intends to go further to show that the co-evolution process
continues in China’s migration towards 3G and smartphones, which works to
home-grown brands’ advantage at the expense of Shanzhai handset makers. This has
to do with the changing eco-system with growing importance of service platforms
and mobile internet applications in the migration.

3. The Uptake of 3G Mobile Communications and Smartphones in China


Not until 2009, when its indigenous standard of TD-SCDMA became technologically
ready, did China launch its 3G mobile communications services. As of the end of 2012,
out of 1.11 billion subscribers of mobile phone in China, 232.8 million subscribers
used 3G mobile phones5. Despite a low 3G penetration of around 20%, China has
overtaken the U.S.A. to become the largest smartphone market in the world, with
the smartphone shipments in China being expected to reach over 150 million in 2012,
according to various sources6.

Arguably, the massive uptake of smartphones in China has something to do with the
advent of low-cost smartphones for the masses, with price tags below CNY 2,000 and
even around CNY 1,000. Also, the role of China’s indigenous standard TD-SCDMA is
debatable in this development. On the one hand, as of the end of 2012, China
Mobile, the business champion of TD-SCDMA, just captured 38% of the 3G market
share, as compared to 33% for China Unicom and 29% for China Telecom. On the
other hand, the number of low-cost smartphones penetration varies across different
marketing sources, but the bottom line is that the low-cost smartphone is a key
driver in the Chinese market (Huang, 2011), thanks to a marketing campaign of CNY
1,000 smartphones pioneered by China Telecom, since September, 2009 onwards.
For example, according to Canalysys, a local analyst house, entry-level smartphones
were estimated to make up 25% of smartphones sold in the Chinese market in 2012
and expected to reach 40% in 20157. In a same vein, a report by Eguan, another local

5
Source: http://www.miit.gov.cn/n11293472/n11293832/n11294132/n12858447/15036653.html,
accessed on 2013/1/29.
6
For example, see an IDC press release covered by Forbes, titled “China now the world's largest
smartphone market”, source:
http://www.forbes.com/sites/ericsavitz/2012/08/30/china-now-the-worlds-largest-smartphone-ma
rket/, accessed on 2013/1/8.
7
Source:
http://micgadget.com/27390/sub-200-smartphones-expecting-to-proliferate-in-china-by-2015/,
accessed on 2013/1/25.

10
marketing consultant, suggests that the average price for Android-based
smartphones in China had declined from CNY 2,020 in the second quarter of 2011 to
CNY 1,560 in the second quarter of 20128.

Along with this trend, the Chinese market has witnessed the surge of home-grown
smartphone manufacturers. Figure 3 makes a market-share comparison of leading
smartphone brands in the global and Chinese markets. While the global market is
dominated by internationally premium brands, such as Samsung (39.6%), Apple
(25.1%), BlackBerry (6.0%) and HTC (6.0%), according to IDC, a few local brands, such
as Lenovo (13.0%), Coolpad (10.4%), ZTE (10.1%) and Huawei (10.0%), are among the
leading players, along with Samsung (14%), in the Chinese market. In particular,
although Apple is the pioneer of the “App Economy” and a pop culture icon in the
U.S.A. and elsewhere, it has been outperformed in market share in China by the
domestic brands mentioned above. Among those local brands, ZTE and Huawei have
had strong market foothold in the communications equipment industry and Lenovo
was a domestic player for 2G handsets as well as personal computers, while Coolpad
(also known as China Wireless) is a newcomer to the mobile device industry.

In addition, included in the category of “others”, which claims about a market share
of 34% in China, are some new local players still largely unknown in the developed
world. Handset vendors such as K-Touch, Gionee, Meizu, Tianyu, Oppo and Bubugao
have built their brands, as well as served as white-box handset OEM (Original
Equipment Manufacturing) producers. Also emerging in the playing field are some
Chinese internet companies, such as Baidu (known as “the Google of China”), Qihoo
and Alibaba, which have entered the marketplace with customized smartphones to
take advantage of their popular contents. In other words, there are nowadays many
potentially promising home-grown smartphone players in China, with some of them
becoming dominant branded players in the domestic market.

8
Source: “The low priced, Android based smartphones of China will change the global market”,
http://lazure2.wordpress.com/2012/09/10/the-low-priced-android-based-smartphones-of-china-wi
ll-change-the-global-market/, accessed on 2013/1/20.

11
(A) The Global Smartphone Market,
Others Unit: %
16.9%

Samsung
39.6%
BlackBerry
6.0%

HTC
6.0%

Nokia
6.4%

Apple
25.1%
Source: Data taken initially from IDC, adapted from Apple Daily, 2013.02.27.

(B) The Chinese Smartphone Market


Unit: %
Samsung
14.0%
Others
34.5%
Lenovo
13.0%

Coolpad
10.4%

Apple
8.0% ZTE
Huawei 10.1%
10.0%

Source: Data taken initially from Canalys, adapted from Commercial Times, 2013.02.01.
Figure 3 A Market-share Comparison of Leading Smartphone Brands in the Global
and Chinese Markets, 2012

12
It should be noted that the Chinese firms named above are just the tip of the iceberg,
as far as the ecosystem of the Chinese smartphone and 3G mobile communications
service sectors are concerned. In terms of the hardware manufacturing, according to
a latest report by China Academy of Telecommunication Research (2013; p.13), an
important research institute under the Ministry of Industry and Information
Technology (MIIT), about 73% (more than 380 firms) of some 529 handset makers in
China are engaged in the manufacturing of smartphones, clustering mainly in
Guangdong, followed with distance by Beijing, Tianjin and Fujian (p.40). The
significance of Guangdong in this regard suggests a great degree of continuity, thanks
in part to the industrial upgrading of the local Shanzhai handset sector. In addition,
an overwhelming share (97.7%) of smartphones produced by the domestic firms is
Android-based.

4. The New Ecosystem and Industrial Transformation in China


The migration from 2G to 3G marks a turning point for the mobile communication
service sector. In the 2G period, most of contents, mainly voice communications and
short messages, delivered over the mobile communications network were produced
by the user. The service operator hence could sit back, without paying much
attention to applications and even the capabilities of the handset. In fact, the three
mobile carriers in China did not offer subsidized service plans to their customers until
the launch of their 3G services. In the meantime, manufacturers of feature handsets
for 2G mobile communications services tended to focus on micro functional
innovations of hardware to lure consumers. For example, some of the more exotic
Shanzhai handsets at that time looked like watches or a packet of premium cigarettes
for the owner to show off, while others provided striking new features, such as solar
chargers, telephoto lenses, superloud speakers or ultraviolet lights to detect forged
currency (Chen et al., 2013). In their own way, some of Chinese Shanzhai handset
makers deployed as many (but different) features and innovations as their legitimate
counterparts. They quickly produced a variety of trendy handsets that were
affordable, fashionable, and even tailor-made for migrant workers, rural farmers and
urban young white-collared workers. A few Shanzhai handsets makers, such as
Tianyu, had already grown into a strong brand presence in the market before the
arrival of smartphones.

At the turn towards 3G, Apple pioneered app services (known as the App Economy),
which have not only boosted the popularity and proliferation of smartphones but
also demonstrated the significance of applications and user experiences to mobile
communications. Application-driven and software-based innovations for handsets

13
are hence stimulated. In China, home-grown internet and e-commerce services have
been developing rapidly within a “walled garden” mainly because the government’s
internet censorship covers a wide range of content issues and behaviors in the cyber
world for the sake of broadly-defined “national security and political integrity”. In
addition, foreign firms’ participation in Internet Content Services (ICP), such as online
sales and mail ordering, is currently restricted according to the Chinese Foreign
Investment Industrial Guidance Catalogue. This has led to the dominance of domestic
internet companies, such as Baidu, Tencent and Alibaba in the Chinese market9.
Many popular internet services and applications in the developed world, such as
Facebook, Twitter, have in fact been fended off in the Chinese market. Cultural and
language differences also have resulted in large differences in user behaviors, such as
handwriting. This requires smartphone vendors and service providers to develop
localized user interfaces dedicated to the Chinese market. It is against the backdrop
that the new Chinese ecosystem and industrial transformation at issue is taking place
with strong local flavors.

Figure 4 identifies the key factors and facilitators in the new ecosystem and industrial
transformation that has resulted from the migration from 2G to 3G in China. In the
2G period, as mentioned above, with users as the main content providers plus a
limited range and variety of mobile internet services, the mobile operators tended to
keep a distance from the handset vendors. This gave ample room for the Shanzhai
vendors to generate various “micro” functional innovations of hardware catering to
diverse demands from the grassroots, as compared to the overshooting of function
by branded firms. They were once also able to outperform local brands as well as
international brands by taking advantage of Mediatek’s turnkey solutions, which
incorporated OSs and application software into a single chip and made it much easier
for handset makers to design and produce a wide variety of mobile phones (Chen et
al., 2013; Rong and Shi, 2009).

9
In China, mobile internet is not far from as popular as desktop internet. According to the official
statistics of the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology (MIIT), as of the end of 2012, China
had 420 million mobile internet users, compared to 564 million desktop internet users. Also,
according to China Academy of Telecommunication Research (2013; p.16), China is secondary only
to the U.S.A. in terms of the number of downloads of mobile applications.

14
2G Period Facilitators 3G Period
 App Economy pioneered by Apple  Increased popularity of mobile
 Rising significance of applications to internet and the App Economy
 A limited range and variety of
Applications mobile internet services mobile communications
 Domestic internet giants’ entry
into smartphone business
 Entrepreneurship development
programs for apps, launched by the
domestic key players
 Operator-centric model
 Keeping a distance from handset  Marketing strategy of low-cost
Operators smartphones for the masses
vendors  Closer relationships between
 Increasing strengths of Android the operators, platform owners
platform and vendors for customized
 Focusing on functional handsets, facilitating branding
innovation catering to diverse  Increasing popularity of smartphones of a few handset vendors
Handset demands from the grassroots
 Transformation of vendors with  Strong market foothold for a
vendors
 Shanzhai vendors once Shanzhai origin by upgrading few home-grown brands
outperforming local brands existing capabilities

 Mediatek (Taiwanese)
Chipset for  Qualcomm
 Mainly Mediatek, with its
 Spreadtrum (domestic)
handsets turnkey solutions
 HiSilicom, Leadcore (domestic)

Source: The authors.


Figure 4 The New Ecosystem and Industrial Transformation of Smartphones and Services in China

15
In contrast, in the migration from 2G to 3G and from feature phones to smartphones,
firms with different domains have sought to establish platforms of different types to
be the gatekeeper and value capturer for the development and provision of mobile
digital services, resulting in a typology of platforms, as suggested by Ballon (2009),
including the teleco-centric (also known as operator-centric) platform model (for
example Vodafone Live!), device-centric platform model (for example iPhone) and
aggregator-centric platform (for example Google) model. In China, the
operator-centric model has prevailed (Huang, 2011), because the three operators use
different 3G technologies, they are hence actively involved in smartphone sourcing
and distribution. Especially, China Mobile has to effectively mobilize external
suppliers and developers, by launching entrepreneurship development program of
App, for the development and provision of smartphones and mobile digital services,
compatible with its unique TD-SCDMA standard and its OPhone OS platform and
Mobile Market service platform. This gives rise to increased attention of the
operators paid to the development and marketing of customized smartphones. The
operators also opt to promote low-cost and/or entry-level smartphones for the
masses in order to increase the penetration rate of 3G services. This has resulted in a
closer relationship between the operators and domestic smartphone vendors for
customized handsets.

In addition, as elsewhere in the world, there are more than just operator-centric
models in China. Major domestic internet firms, such as Baidu, Tencent, Qihoo and
Alibaba also come out with customized smartphones via outsourcing to take
advantage of their popular social network services (for example, QQ services) and
e-commerce services (for example, Taobao Mall), giving rise to the aggregator-centric
platform model in China. Also, Xiaomi, initially as an internet firm, follows Apple’s
device-centric platform model to promote its premium smartphones and its MIUI OS
platform. Figure 5 illustrates the value chain coverage of the Chinese key players
under the different models.

16
Network

China Telecom
China Unicom
Online

China Mobile
Service

Tencent
Alibaba
Baidu
Native

Xiaomi
applications

Huawei
Operating
system

Handset

Note: refers to what the individual players initially focused. When drawing this figure, we borrow ideas
from Kenny and Pon’s (2011) illustration.
Figure 5 Value Chain Coverage of the Chinese Key Players under the Different
Models in China

All of the models mentioned above require the smartphone vendors to establish
strong interactions in the design process with either the operators or the content
aggregators at issue. It is also essential for the operators and content aggregators to
get involved in the sourcing and marketing of customized smartphones in order to
capture value from their OS platforms and/or service platforms (Eaton et al., 2011;
Kenney and Pon, 2011). Although both the Chinese legitimate handset vendors and
numerous Shanzhai handset makers can take advantage of accumulated low-cost
design and manufacturing knowledge from their previous low-end GSM handset
businesses, the shift in 3G services and smartphones to the platform-based
development tends to work in favor of larger smartphone vendors.

As a result, China’s smartphone industry has witnessed the rise of a few home-grown
brands. Among them, Huawei and ZTE have long established strong customer
relationships with Chinese as well as international operators via their existing
telecom equipment business, and their operator-branded handsets (with Vodafone
and Orange). In contrast, some other currently dominant players have succeeded in
shedding their Shanzhai origins, becoming well known household names in China.
For example, in 2012 China Wireless (under Coolpad) established a major R&D center
in Shenzhen, with more than 1,700 R&D engineers. The company’s dual-mode
dual-working handset (or four-channel handset under China Telecom’s brand name)
is a distinctive type of handset for the China market, which supports simultaneous
call waiting and phone calls on both the GSM and CDMA networks. Coolpad has

17
developed close relationships with all three Chinese mobile carriers in order to tap
the growing 3G boom in China. In short, the availability and popularity of affordable,
capable entry-level smartphones has led to consolidation in the domestic handset
industry, at the expense of the Shanzhai handset makers.10

It should be noted that such a turnkey solution as Mediatek’s chipset remains


indispensable to this transformation. Actually, its significance has prompted new
players’ entry. It is estimated that Mediatek has captured about 50% of the
smartphone chipset market share in China. This has resulted in part from the
company’s shift in customer target from mainly Shanzhai handset makers to the
well-established Chinese smartphone vendors and/or brands. Apart from Mediatek
and Spreadtrum, the two existing players, Qualcomm has penetrated into the market
with the Qualcomm Reference Design (QRD), for the belief that entry-level
smartphones will drive future mobile growth11. The company has also invested in
Xiaomi, a Chinese internet firm, with a famous i-Phone-like model. In addition, a few
local players have surged in this market segments, including HiSilicon, a local IC
design house and a spin-off of Huawei and Leadcore, the chip design arm of Chinese
communications equipment company Datang Group.

On the application side, apart from the well-known “App Economy”, initiated by
Apple, there has been growing popularity of applications to mobile communications
in China, with Chinese flavor and versions. For example, Tencent’s Weixin pioneered
and made popular voice-recorded message services, nowadays widely copied by
other players of social media services. Local on-line payment options, such as Taobao
Alipay, also prevail in China partly because of a low penetration rate of credit cards.
In addition, the local key players, such as the mobile carriers and content aggregators
have put serious efforts into entrepreneurship development programs to cultivate
app developers, for example China Mobile’s program to incubate one million app
entrepreneurs, bringing about the fast proliferation of home-grown applications.12

10
In the Chinese market, there are still Shanzhai smartphones, such as MEOX 1 and Android iPhone
4S (fake iPhone 4S), HDC Galaxy S3 (fake Samsung Galaxy S3) and HDC One X (fake HTC One X),
which imitate premium models from Apple, Samsung and HTC. For more information, see
http://www.shanzhaiji.com/.
11
See Qualcomm’s PowerPoint presentation titled “The Qualcomm Reference Design App Ecosystem
Opportunity”, by Yan Zhuang at Upling 2012 Conference.
https://www.uplinq.com/.../The_QC_Reference_Design_App_Ecosyst...
12
According to an unofficial source, there are actually more than 200 Android app stores because
Google Play is not widely available in China. For source, see:
http://bambooinnovator.com/2013/04/06/china-is-finally-becoming-a-lucrative-market-for-app-ma
kers/ (accessed on 2013/05/18).

18
It is important to note that the ecosystem in China has benefitted from the
overwhelming dominance of Google’s Android OS in the Chinese market, with a
market share of about 86%. In particular, Android OS has facilitated the rise of the
home-grown brands and the transformation of some of the Shanzhai vendors
because Android OS platform has lowered the technology barriers between handset
brand vendors capable of high-end product development and handset OEMs capable
only of handset manufacturing and low-end handset design. Taking advantage of this,
such a firm as China Wireless has succeeded in shedding its Shanzhai origin and
becoming a leading branded player.

5. Discussions
The 3G transformation of China goes beyond the advent and popularity of low-cost
smartphones, but affects the entire industrial eco-system. Chinese 3G subscribers
have a different affordability level for handsets compared with developed countries,
reflecting differing income levels, as well as different user behavior for handsets and
mobile applications, on account of language and cultural differences (Huang, 2011).
On the one hand, the global leading smartphone brands tend to equip their
smartphones with many attractive features and/or functions, which tend to be global
models to lure consumers in the developed countries and the elite in Tier 1 cities in
China but may turn out to be “too much of a good thing” or at least simply
unaffordable for the less wealthy population and rural residents (the sluggish tiers of
the market; Christensen et al., 2001: 81-82). On the other hand, the rising local
brands have managed to build their portfolio with feature-rich, multi-SIM handsets13
which span across ultra-low and entry-tier segments, catering to growing rural
subscribers, bringing about smartphones for the masses in China.

In a study on Japan’s mobile phone market, Chen, Watanabe and Griffy-Brown (2007:
17) have found that the prevailing customized handset collaboration model between
handset vendors and operators has resulted in a high concentration of high-end
handsets in the Japanese market because “the demanding nature of Japan’s
customers for well-functioned mobile phones”. However, though the customized
handset collaboration model also prevails in China, a booming market with high
income inequity and diverse demands from the grassroots has created new
opportunities for lower-cost smartphones. The response to this opportunity has
required the home-grown brands, together with the operators, to produce a variety
of trendy smartphones in the lower- to mid-price range that are affordable,

13
With multi-SIM handsets, Chinese mobile phone subscribers can save costs while roaming within
China.

19
fashionable for migrant workers, rural farmers and urban young white-collared
workers, leading to the creation and expansion of “good-enough” market segments.
In addition, as mentioned earlier, since there are more than three hundred handset
makers in China engaged in manufacturing of smartphones, most of them form a
camp of white-box, without close relationships with the operators and the major
content-aggregators investing in mobile service platforms. To fight for their market
share, they have to design and manufacture a variety of smartphones with trendy
features and micro innovations, by benchmarking their legitimate counterparts, to
cater for diverse demands from the grassroots in the less wealthy parts of China.

An interesting question is: will the Chinese smartphones be confined to the domestic
market and low-end market segments? Some indications suggest that the answer for
it seems to be “no”. For the rising Chinese brands, another area for growth is the
overseas market less developed than China, in particular India and Africa. Coolpad
has teamed up with Reliance Webstore, a subsidiary of Reliance Communications to
market its dual mode smartphones in India. Give-Me-Five, a Chinese handset maker,
even grew out of the Indian market from scratch, becoming a well-known household
name in India. There is even a case where Coolpad has cooperated with American
operator MetroPCS to launch its first LTE (Long Term Evolution) 4G mobile phone
named Quattro in the U.S.A.

Given China’s ambition of TD-SCDMA, it is worth discussing the role of industrial


standards in the Chinese migration of smartphones. To do so, one needs to consider
the broader meanings of industrial standards than the usual case, in light of the fact
that TD-SCDMA is the Chinese indigenous standard at the infrastructure level.
Referring to the revised version of “three level model for standards and innovation in
ICT”, discussed in Section 2, one can argue that for the “App Economy” and
broadband mobile communications services to prevail, it takes more than the
technologies and standards of infrastructure, requiring other (de facto) standards at
the middleware/service platform and application levels (Ballon, 2009; Ballon and
Walravens, 2009; Hammershøj et al., 2009; Eaton et al., 2011; Tilson et al., 2012 and
Yoo et al., 2010). Apple’s iOS and App Store are obvious examples at issue. Of interest
to note is the sharp contrast in the global revenue of mobile phone business
between Apple and Nokia, which implies a shift in the source of competitiveness for
mobile phone players from the sphere of architectural design to that of
middleware/service platform and applications. Apple follows other players’ (for
example, Nokia’s 3G) industrial standards at the architecture level, but the company’s
success in iPod, iPhone and iPad lies in its proprietary platforms, iTunes and App

20
Store, and providing software design kits for numerous external developers to design
applications with customer experiences. This implies that the mobile
communications sector, in terms of both service and device, has become more
application driven than ever, even in the context of “ the layered modular
architecture” (Yoo et al., 2010). In other words, TD-SCDMA, though important to
China, alone cannot fully support China’s migration towards indigenous smartphones
and broadband mobile communications services.

Good news for the China’s stakeholders is that they can take advantage of Google’s
Android, a free and open-source OS, to develop smartphones and mobile internet
services. As shown in the right part of Figure 6, there are a few Chinese versions of
OSs for smartphones, based on Google’s Android platform, such as Baidu’s Yi OS and
Xiaomi’s MIUI. For example, Baidu Yi OS is essentially a forked version of Android,
providing a lot of the same functionality and services available from Google, based
on which Baidu throws in its own bundle of apps, such as native maps, reader, music,
web apps, and even a program similar to Google Places. In addition, Alibaba’s Aliyun
is Linux-based, enabling Alibaba to take advantage of its popular e-commerce
services. As to service platforms, apart from the three operators’, a few Chinese
internet companies, such as Baidu, Qihoo and Alibaba have jumped on the
bandwagon to produce and market their own versions. They may even benefit from
China’s latest policy to issue licences for Mobile Virtual Network Operators (MVNO),
allowing them to launch their own mobile communications services by leasing
airtime capacity from the incumbent operators. Although the Chinese firms can lend
support from the factor that China’s cyber world is a walled-garden with heavy
regulations, enabling China to fend off many popular Internet applications and
services from the developed world, it remains to see how well these Chinese players
will prosper and outreach in the future. Tencent’s Weixin and its voice-recorded
message services obviously have done a good job in this regard.

More importantly, China’s quest for indigenous innovations and industrial standards
has to be viewed in a broader context than just the architecture level, when it comes
to the migration towards smartphones and broadband mobile communications
services. It is true that the indigenous 3G standard, TD-SCDMA, enables China Mobile
to bargain with Apple for the network access of iPhones and facilitates the rise of
domestic players, such as HiSilicon and Leadcore. However, a serious concern has
been expressed about China’s overwhelming dependence on Google’s OS platform of
Android (China Academy of Telecommunication Research, 2013: 46). As shown in
Figure 7, Nokia’s Symbian, which once dominated the Chinese market as well as

21
global market, has lost market share within just few years. In contrast, Android
nowadays accounted for 86.4% of the market share for OS platform in China in 2012,
while for the Chinese home-developed OSs, such as Alibaba’s Aliyun and Baidu’s Yi
OS, their market shares were less than 1%. In other words, since the mobile
communications sector has become more application driven than ever and layered
platforms have become the key to the ecosystem, TD-SCDMA, the industrial standard
at the infrastructure level, can only be part of Chinese solutions to indigenous
innovations.

On balance, underlying Chinese efforts to develop and promote its indigenous


TD-SCDMA standard are the government’s serious intentions, such as to reduce
dependence on foreign technologies and royalties paid to the foreign dominant
architecture or standard setters and to set up own playing field (Liu and Zhou, 2013
and Yan, 2007). With its accumulated strengths in mobile communications services,
China Mobile has done relatively well in promoting its TD-SCDMA 3G services.
However, the advent of 3G services and smartphones has brought about a
complicated ecosystem in China, as the rest of the world has witnessed, implying
that technologies for 3G infrastructure is only part of the solutions required. The rise
of home-grown brands for smartphones, at the expense of Shanzhai handset vendors,
has benefitted more from the “sluggish tiers of the market”, in Christensen’s terms
(Christensen et al., 2001), and the foreign platform of Android. This has much to do
with the “platformization” of smartphones and 3G services (Feijóo et al., 2009) and
the resultant close relationships between smartphone makers and the operators and
the service platform owners (Eaton et al., 2011; Kenney and Pon, 2011). The
proliferation of home-grown app services popular for smartphones has gained a
great deal of support from the “walled garden” of the Chinese cyber world, though
due credit should also be given to the stakeholders involved. To quite an extent, it is
Android platform that has bolstered China’s evolution in both smartphones and OSs
for broadband mobile communications services. Therefore, the evolution of china’s
mobile phone industry and its currently prevailing good-enough innovations can be
better comprehended by referring to the idea of the co-evolution of technology,
industrial structure, and supporting institutions (Nelson, 1994).

22
User
Numerous internet content providers and app
Application (Ex. i-mode, games, location-based design houses and designers
services)
 The three operators’ own service
Service platforms
platform  Baidu’s, Qihoo’s, and Alibaba’s
Middleware/Service platform (Ex. WML, App service platforms
Store)
Operating  Google’s Android
System  Xiaomi’s MIUI
 Baidu’s Yi OS
Infrastructure (Ex. Architecture design for 3G, 4G,  Apple’s iOS
broadcasting)  Alibaba’s Aliyun (Linux-based)

Technology WCDAM, CDMA2000, TD-SCDMA

The three levels of ICT industrial standards platform

-SCDMA
Note: The left part the figure is adapted from China EU Information Technology Standards research partnership.
Source: The authors.
Figure 6 Industrial Standards and the New Ecosystem of Smartphones and Services in China

23
10.2% 2.3% 2.4% 1.2%
100%
1.9% 1.7% 1.2% 0.6%
2.8% 8.6%
90% 0.6% 11.8% 7.9% 2.0%
11.4%
80% 6.7%
2.8%
26.6% Others
70%
OMS
60% Windows Phone
iOS
50%
64.7% Symbian
86.4%
40% Android
74.7%
30% 58.6%

20%

10%
12.6%
0% 0.3%
2009 2010 2011 2012

Note: Others include Aliyun, BADA, Linux, MeeGo, UniPlus, Baidu, WebOS.
Source: Adapted from China Academy of Telecommunication Research (2013).
Figure 7 The Market Share of Mobile Operating Systems in China, 2009-2012

6. Conclusions
The Chinese government has put much effort and resources in promoting indigenous
innovations and industrial standards in the mobile communications sector. How well
has this lived up to high expectation. Indeed, TD-SCDMA has been endorsed by ITU
and actively promoted by its business champion, China Mobile. What’s more, a few
home-grown brands have become the leading suppliers of smartphones in the
Chinese market, outperforming the once-dominant players of Shanzhai handsets and
a few international premium brands. However, to better understand the market
dynamics and industrial upgrading process underway in China, one has to look
beyond the mainstream views of supply side factors and top-down approach to
indigenous innovations.

In fact, the rise of Chinese home-grown brands has taken advantage of the advent
and growing popularity of low-cost smartphones in China and they are on track to
becoming known players, both domestically and internationally, in supplying
affordable, mid-tier and even high-end smartphones, further expanding the territory
of their good-enough innovations. Taking a closer look, the good-enough innovations
have much to do with the new ecosystem and industrial transformation taking place
in China. The migration from 2G to 3G in China has brought about platform-based

24
development and new business models, rendering new organizing logic between the
smartphone vendors and other important stakeholders. The prevailing
operator-centric model has given rise to increased attention of the operators paid to
the development, sourcing and marketing of customized smartphones. This has
resulted in a closer relationship between the operators and the domestic
smartphone vendors for customized handsets, leading to the consolidation of the
Chinese smartphone industry. In addition, major domestic internet firms, such as
Baidu, Tencent, Qihoo and Alibaba also come out with customized smartphones to
take advantage of their popular social network services and e-commerce services. As
a result, China’s smartphone industry has witnessed the rise of a few home-grown
brands. What underlies this is a co-evolution process of social and market factors in
shaping Chinese innovations, highlighting the role of grassroots demands in the
Chinese market and the growing popularity of mobile internet services in the manner
of platform-based development within Chinese walled garden.

It is important to note the role of industrial standards in the Chinese migration of


smartphones. To do so, one needs to consider broader meanings of industrial
standards than what is often referred to, in light of the fact that TD-SCDMA is the
Chinese indigenous standard at the infrastructure level. In short, TD-SCDMA can only
be part of Chinese indigenous innovations and industrial standards for migration
towards 3G services and smartphones. In fact, at the middleware and service
platform level, there are a few Chinese versions of mobile OSs, based on Google’s
Android platform, such as Baidu’s Yi OS and Xiaomi’s MIUI. As to service platforms,
apart from the three operators’, Chinese internet companies, such as Baidu, Qihoo
and Alibaba have jumped on the bandwagon to produce and market their own
versions. Since the mobile communications sector has become more application
driven than ever and layered platforms have become the key to the ecosystem,
TD-SCDMA, the industrial standard at the infrastructure level, can only be part of
Chinese solutions to indigenous innovations. Therefore, China’s quest for indigenous
innovations and industrial standards has to be viewed in a broader context than just
the infrastructure level, when it comes to migration towards smartphones and
broadband mobile communications services.

25
References
Ballon, Pieter and Nils Walravens. (2009) ‘Towards a new typology for mobile
platforms: Validation through case study analysis’, 1st Europe, Middle East, North
Africa Regional ITS conference (20th European Regional ITS Conference), Manama,
Kingdom of Bahrain, 26-28 October 2009.
Ballon, Pieter. (2009) ‘Platform types and gatekeeper roles: The case of the mobile
communications industry’. Paper presented at the Summer Conference 2009 of
Copenhagen Business School, Frederiksberg, Denmark, June 17-19, 2009.
Brandt, L. and E. Thun. (2010) ‘The Fight for the Middle: Upgrading, Competition, and
Industrial Development in China’. World Development, 38, 1555-1574.
Chen, Chaojung, Chihiro Watanabe, Charla Griffy-Brown. (2007) ‘The co-evolution
process of technological innovation—An empirical study of mobile phone vendors
and telecommunication service operators’. Technology in Society, 29, 1-22.
Chen, Shin-Horng, Pei-Chang Wen and Chih-Yen Tai. (2013) ‘Shanzhai Handsets and
China’s Bottom of the Pyramid Innovation', in Phil Cooke, Glen Searle and Kevin
O’Connor (eds.). The Economic Geography of the IT Industry in the Asia Pacific
Region. London and New York: Routledge.
China Academy of Telecommunication Research. (2013) White Paper on Mobile
Internet. Beijing: China Academy of Telecommunication Research of MIIT (in
Chinese).
Christensen, C. M. (2003) The Innovator's Dilemma. Cambridge, MA: Harvard
University Press.
Christensen, C., T. Craig and S. Hart. (2001) ‘The great disruption’. Foreign Affairs, 80
(2), 80-95.
Dawar, Niraj and Amitava Chattopadhyay. (2000) ‘Rethinking marketing programs for
emerging markets’. William Davidson Institute Working Paper Number 320.
Dosi, G. (2000) Innovation, Organization and Economic Dynamics. Cheltenham, UK:
Edward Elgar.
Eaton, Ben, Silvia Elaluf-Calderwood, Carsten Sørensen, and Youngjin Yoo. (2011)
‘Dynamic structures of control and generativity in digital ecosystem service
innovation: The cases of the Apple and Google Mobile App Stores’. Working Paper
Series 183, Information Systems and Innovation Group, London School of Economics
and Political Science, April 2011.
Feijóo, Claudio, Corina Pascu, Gianluca Misuraca, Wainer Lusoli. (2009) ‘The next
paradigm shift in the mobile ecosystem: Mobile social computing and the increasing
relevance of users’, Communications & Strategies, 75 (3), p.57-76.
Freeman C. and C. Perez. (1988) ‘Structural crisis of adjustment, business cycle and
investment behaviour’. In G. Dosi, C. Freeman, R. Nelson, G. Silverberg and L. Soete

26
(eds.) Technical Change and Economic Theory. London: Pinter.
Gadiesh, O., P. Leung, and T. Vestring. (2007) ‘The battle for China’s good-enough
market’. Harvard business Review, 85 (9), 81-89.
Geels, Frank. (2005) ‘Co-evolution of technology and society: The transition in water
supply and personal hygiene in the Netherlands (1850-1930)—a case study in
multi-level perspective’, Technology in Society, 27, 363-397.
Hammershøj, Allan, Antonio Sapuppo and Reza Tadayoni. (2009) ‘Mobile platforms:
An analysis of mobile operating systems and software development platforms’. Paper
presented at CMI international conference on social networking and communities,
25-26 November 2009, Copenhagen, Denmark.
Holz, Carsten. (2008) ‘China’s economic growth 1978-2025: What we know today
about China’s economic growth tomorrow’. World Development, 36 (10), 1665-1691.
Huang, Leping. (2011) “The RMB 1,000 revolution”, Smartphones: China Telecoms
and Technology. Tokyo: Nomura.
Kenney, Martin and Bryan Pon. (2011) ‘Structuring the smartphone industry: Is the
Mobile Internet OS Platform the Key?’ Keskusteluaiheita Discussion Papers No. 1238,
The Research Institute of the Finnish Economy, 10 Feb. 2011.
Lee, Keun, Seong-Jae Cho and Jia Jin. (2009) ‘Dynamics of catch-up in mobile phones
and automobiles in China: A sectoral innovation system perspective’. China Economic
Journal, 2 (1), 25-53.
Li, Shaomin and Jun Xia. (2008) ‘The roles and performance of state firms and
non-state firms in China’s economic transition’. World Development, 36 (1), 39-54.
Lin, Feida and Weiguo Ye. (2009) ‘Operating system battle in the ecosystem of
smartphone industry’. Paper in 2009 International Symposium on Information
Engineering and Electronic Commerce, 617-621.
Liu, Xue Feng and Zhou Xiao Chao. (2009) ‘The strategic upgrading and restructuring
of China's Shanzhai cellphone industry under financial crisis’. International
Conference on Information Management, Innovation Management and Industrial
Engineering, 1, 562-565.
Liu, Xielin and Jianghua Zhou. (2013) ‘China’s catch-up and innovation model in IT’, in
Phil Cooke, Glen Searle and Kevin O’Connor (eds.). The Economic Geography of the IT
Industry in the Asia Pacific Region. London and New York: Routledge.
Minagawa, Tetsuya Jr., Paul Trott and Andreas Hoecht. (2007) ‘Counterfeit, imitation,
reverse engineering and learning: Reflections from Chinese manufacturing firms’.
R&D Management, 37 (5), 455-467.
Mu Qing and Keun Lee. (2005) ‘Knowledge diffusion, market segmentation and
technological catch-up: The case of telecommunication industry in China’. Research
Policy, 34, 759-783.

27
Nelson, Richard. (1994) ‘The co-evolution of technology, industrial structure, and
supporting institutions’. Industrial and Corporate Change, 3 (1): 47-63.
Nolan, Peter and Xiaoqiang Wang. (1999) ‘Beyond privatization: Institutional
innovation and growth in China’s large state-owned enterprises’. World Development,
27 (1), 169-200.
Perez, Carlota. (195) ‘Microelectronics, long waves and world structural change: New
perspective for developing countries’. World Development, 13 (3), 441-463.
Prahalad, C. K. (2005) The Fortune at the Bottom of the Pyramid. Philadelphia, PA:
Wharton School Publishing.
Rong, Ke and Yongjiang Shi. (2009) Constructing business ecosystem from firm
perspective: cases in high-tech industry, Proceedings of the International ACM
Conference on Management of Emergent Digital EcoSystems (MEDES) in Lyon, France
October 27-30.
Rowen, H. and M. Hancock. (2008) Greater China’s Quest for Innovation. Baltimore,
MD: The Brookings Institution Press
Sheng, Zhu and Yongjiang Shi. (2010) ‘Shanzhai manufacturing –an alternative
innovation phenomenon in China: Its value chain and implications for Chinese
science and technology policies’. Journal of Science and Technology Policy in China, 1
(1), 29-49.
Sigurdson, Jon. (2005) Technological Superpower China. Northampton, MA: Edward
Elgar Publishing.
Struben, Jeroen. (2008) ‘Technological coevolution: Critical dynamics in industry
transformation’. Paper presented at the 25th Celebration Conference on
Entrepreneurship and Innovation—Organizations, Institutions, Systems and Regions.
Copenhagen, Demark, June 17-20, 2008.
Suttmeier, Richard P. and Xiangkui Yao. (2004) ‘China’s Post WTO Technology Policy:
Standards, Software, and the Changing Nature of Techno-Nationalism’. NBER Special
Report 7.
Tilson, David, Carsten Sørensen and Kalle Lyytinen. (2012) ‘Change and control
paradoxes in mobile infrastructure innovation: The Android and iOS mobile operating
systems cases’. Paper presented at 2012 45th Hawaii International Conference on
System Sciences. IEEE Computer Society, 1324-1333.
Tse, Edward, Kevin Ma and Yu Huang. (2009) Shan Zhai: A Chinese Phenomenon.
Beijing: Booz & Company.
Walters, Peter and Saeed Samiee. (2003) ‘Marketing strategy in emerging markets:
The case of China’. Journal of International Marketing, 11 (1), 97-106.
Yoo, Youngjin, Ola Henfridsson and Kalle Lyytinen. (2010) ‘The new organizing logic of
digital innovation: An agenda for information systems research’. Information Systems

28
Research, 21 (4), 724–735.
Yan, Hui. (2007) ‘The 3G standard setting strategy and indigenous innovation policy
in China: Is TD-SCDMA a flagship?’, DRUID Working Paper No. 07-01, Copenhagen:
Danish Research Unit for Industrial Dynamics.
Yueh, Linda. (2009) ‘China’s entrepreneurs’. World Development, 37 (4), 778-786.
Zhou, Yu. (2008) The Inside Story of China’s High-Tech Industry: Making Silicon Valley
in Beijing. Lanham, MA: Rowman and Littlefield Publisher.

29

You might also like