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Friday, September 19, 2014

美国知名科技博客报导两颗红豆:聚焦海外单身华人

VentureBeat是美国一个著名科技博客网站,主要收集了创新公司以及创新公司管理人才等方面的信息。该网站拥有十分强大的编辑团队,他们分别是曾今担任过Hollister Free Lance的专栏作者Anthony Ha(主管科技)、曾今担任过洛杉矶时报和华尔街日报的编辑的Dean Takahashi(主管游戏)、曾为洛杉矶时报在伦敦的分部担任编辑的Camille Ricketts(主管绿色科技)

图片摄于:2014/9/14 @ StartX Demo Day

Dating site 2RedBeans focuses on Chinese singles abroad

"两颗红豆,通过互联网和线下见面活动为北美的华人单身朋友提供更多的交流认识机会,帮助大家寻找到自己的另一半,在美华人婚嫁交友最佳工具。 

两颗红豆采用最新网络技术,全方位隐私, 多方维佳配,互动速配,帮你打开始初矜持。不同于传统的婚恋交友,两颗红豆始终坚持以提高用户征友效果为宗旨,以会员资料的真实性和严肃择偶动机为灵魂,通过新颖的产品来提高会员之间的互动性,同时借助推荐系统来帮助您更有效率的找到适合您的会员。"

Oftentimes entrepreneurs set out to build the solution they couldn’t find when struggling with a problem. For Q Zhao, it was finding fellow Chinese singles in the Bay Area in a simple and efficient manner.
  
Her solution? 2RedBeans, a dating site geared towards Chinese singles in foreign markets who are looking to connect with fellow Chinese singles. 2RedBeans bills itself as “a dating site for Chinese diaspora,” or “JDate for Chinese people,” as Zhao described it during her presentation at StartX’s demo day yesterday.

While many online dating sites already exist, Zhao, who admits she’s tried pretty much all of them, realized that it was difficult to sift through all the profiles and messages efficiently. At the same time, there’s also the fear of leaving a stone unturned and possibly missing out on “the one.” Having a dating site that focuses exclusively on your type cuts out the noise and lets you focus on mingling.

But it’s not only about narrowing down the singles. Through her online dating trials and tribulations, Zhao also noticed that the sites weren’t really catering to Chinese users.

Chinese people care about different things than general America,” she told me. Education, career, how long they’ve been living in the U.S. (or whatever country) are all much more important to Chinese singles than to the average person, Zhao said. Naturally, she designed 2RedBeans’ profiles to make those elements clearly visible.

On the business model front, 2RedBeans is using the tried and true models we all know, charging per-message or for subscriptions, but with a little twist.

Chinese people are very conservative, so I give them one more thing,” said Zhao. Instead of charging users to pay for each message they send, they are only charged when they open a received message, giving them the feeling of getting a better deal and having more control over the money they pour into the dating site. 2RedBeans also offers a VIP subscription service, which lets users have unlimited messages for a monthly fee. 2RedBeans also organizes social events for its users, which Zhao says are pretty popular and successful.

Here are a few interesting numbers I got from Zhao about her site’s user base:

       70 percent of users use simplified/traditional Mandarin as their default site language
       30 percent are North America-born
       70 percent purchase 6-month to 1-year VIP subscriptions
       2 percent of users a non-Asian

Zhao also added that of the 2 percent of users that are non-Asian, most are men and most of them either speak or are in the process of learning Chinese. She and her team know that because many of them share that nugget of information on their profiles and even use Chinese here there while chatting with their matches on the site. Zhao also told me that they have a “really high match rate” with other singles, meaning that they’re quite popular.

I think Chinese people have a lot of respect for them,” Zhao said, referring to their interest and efforts in learning a new and difficult language.

Most of 2RedBeans users are in California, New York City, and Toronto and Vancouver in Canada. However, Zhao says her total addressable market is 100 million people around the world. And at 15 percent market penetration right now, there are many more potential single for 2RedBeans to scoop up.

2RedBeans also has some brand-name supporters in its corner, with Match.com’s founder, Will Bunker, as an advisor to the company. It has also signed an exclusive partnership with three popular Chinese dating shows for their U.S. productions and events.


The company was founded in 2010 by Zhao and Jeff Shi, although Shi has since stepped away.

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