After becoming the third largest smartphone manufacturer in the world,
China’s Xiaomi is bullish about taking the top spot from Apple in five to 10
years.
Top Apple and Xiaomi executives traded blows under the veil of light-hearted
barbs at China’s World Internet Conference in Wuzhen, where Xiaomi’s chief
executive and founder Lei Jun described the company as a “small miracle” and
said that it was setting its sights on world smartphone domination.
“I believe that no one thought the Xiaomi from three years ago, which just
made its first phone, would later rank as the third largest player,” Lei said
speaking for three minutes after arriving two hours late for a panel that was
scheduled for two hours. “India is becoming our largest overseas market. Within
five or 10 years, we have the opportunity to become the number one smartphone
company in the world.”
‘A small miracle like Xiaomi’
Xiaomi was founded in 2010 and made its first smartphone in 2011 in China. It
quickly became the number one smartphone manufacturer in China, rising to have
70 million users and becoming the world’s third largest smartphone manufacturer
in the third quarter of this year.
Lei said that the company is forecast to almost triple its user base in the
next year to 200 million users and targets the number-one spot globally
currently held by Samsung powered by Xiaomi’s expansion into new markets.
“It is easy to say, it is more difficult to do,” Bruce Sewell, Apple’s
general counsel and senior vice president of legal and government affairs, told
the conference when asked about Lei’s bold claims which would require Xiaomi to
displace Apple in second place, adding that there were “many good competitive
phones in China”.
“In this magic land, we produced not only a company like Alibaba, but a small
miracle like Xiaomi,” Lei said.
Xiaomi may be number one in China, where Apple languishes in sixth place,
but on a global scale with 6% of the smartphone shipments in the third quarter,
it is far behind Samsung’s 25% and Apple’s 12%.
Xiaomi’s smartphones use Google’s Android software with designs which some
say mimic Apple’s iPhone. They compete with both Apple and Samsung smartphones
with similar functionality, but at prices significantly lower than the cost of
an iPhone 6 or Galaxy S5.
Moving from outside of China and select developing markets in south-east Asia
and India may also be difficult for Xiaomi, potentially facing legal challenges
from Apple. Jony Ive, Apple’s chief designer, recently hit out at designs that
could be seen as copying Apple.
“I’ll stand a little bit harsh, I don’t see it as flattery,” said Ive when
asked about Chinese smartphone manufacturer Xiaomi, described as “the Apple of
China” in an interview with Vanity Fair. “When you’re doing something for the
first time, you don’t know it’s gonna work. You spend seven or eight years
working on something, and then it’s copied. I think it is really
straightforward. It is theft and it is lazy. I don’t think it is OK at all.”
Xiaomi has made efforts to be more appealing to the west, hiring key
executives from Google, including the outspoken Brazilian vice president of
Android Hugo Barra, who became Xiaomi’s head of international sales and spoke
out about copycat claims.
“Our designers, our engineers, are inspired by great products and by great
design out there. And frankly who in today’s world isn’t?” Barra said at the
WSJD Live conference in Laguna Beach, California.