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Category: Jiayuan.com

Dating Stocks To Go Steady With

Posted on December 13, 2011

StockSMART MONEY – Dec 12 – Of singles over 18 years old, 43% have browsed online dating sites, equating to 40M active U.S. accounts and ~600M visits per month, according to Mashable. Several publicly traded companies compete for online daters. But just like dates themselves, not all are worth your time or investment dollars. The strongest stock also happens to be the biggest. IAC/InterActiveCorp dominates the category with a 20% market share, according to Online Personals Watch. Significantly smaller but potentially more lucrative than IAC is Spark Networks. Last month, Spark Networks reported a 28% boost in YOY revenue and a 30% increase in paying subscribers. While the U.S. has over 40M active online dating accounts, China has more than three times that amount. Jiayuan.com, China's largest dating site, listed on the NASDAQ in May. Despite doubling the number of active paying accounts since 2010, the stock has cratered in the past month.

by Jonathan Hoenig
See full article at Smart Money

See all posts on Match.com
See all posts on SparkNetworks
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Match.com Expands In China

Posted on December 1, 2011

Match zhenai logosBEST OF RENCONTRE – Nov 30 - Match.com and Zhenai.com are collaborating in order to expand in a country, where a site like Jiayuan.com, founded in 2003, totals more than 50 millions members. Match.com now owns 20% of Zhenai's shares, website that amounts to 30 millions users. It will however be necessary to adapt advertising campaigns, fees and functionalities in order to accommodate their future members.

by Rébecca Lazzerini
See the full article at Best of Rencontre (in French)

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Jiayuan Announces Third Quarter 2011 Financial Results

Posted on November 18, 2011

Jiayuan logo newPR NEWSWIRE – Nov 18 – Net revenues for Q3 '11 were RMB90.9M (US$14.3M), a YOY increase of 84.5%. Operating income was RMB21.5M (US$3.4M), a YOY increase of 132.4%. Jiayuan had 5,560,387 average monthly active user accounts during the quarter, compared to 4,201,952 in the corresponding period in 2010. The number of average monthly paying user accounts in the third quarter of 2011 was 1,250,439, almost double the 649,250 average monthly paying user accounts recorded in the corresponding period in 2010.

The full article was originally published at MarketWatch, but is no longer available.

See all posts on Jiayuan.com

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International Chinese Dating Site IsThisFate.com Launches

Posted on September 22, 2011

Isthisfate logo OPW – Sep 22 - Jiayuan.com, China's largest online dating site, has launched its English version – IsThisFate.com.  Is ThisFate.com is aimed at expats living in China, overseas Chinese looking to reconnect, and anyone interested in Chinese romance.

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Jiayuan.com: Were They Fit to List at All?

Posted on September 15, 2011

Jiayuan logo new WSJ – Sep 15 - Western regulators are grappling with a growing list of frauds at Chinese companies listed overseas. Jiayuan.com is by all accounts an entirely above-board Chinese company. Because foreign investment is technically forbidden in the Internet services sector, Jiayuan.com created a "variable-interest entity," or VIE—a common feature of many Chinese listings. Under this structure, the operating part of the company and the overseas listed part are two completely separate entities. The Chinese-owned part signs a series of contracts with the listed entity to transfer revenues in a way that allows the books of the two companies to be consolidated under U.S. accounting rules. It's a risky structure since the foreign shareholders don't actually own the Chinese company. A rule issued in 2006 requires Chinese residents to register with the State Administration of Foreign Exchange (SAFE) before setting up offshore companies. Jiayuan's founders failed to do this when they created the offshore entities used in the VIE structure. Jiayuan says it has now completed the required registrations, but the question remains: Why was the IPO brought to market before this potentially fatal problem was resolved?

by Paul Gillis
See full article at WSJ

See all posts on Jiayuan.com

Read the interview with Rose Gong, CEO of Jiayuan

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Jiayuan Grooms New Plan

Posted on September 7, 2011

Jiayuan logo new WSJ – Sep 7 - Jiayuan makes money primarily by charging users to exchange love notes through its website for two yuan each. Jiayuan is growing quickly, with Q2 revenue more than doubling from a year earlier to $12.9M and earnings growing at a similar pace. The move toward user fees comes as the online ad market is growing in China and getting crowded with sites seeking advertisers. The market still is small compared with that of the U.S. Total revenue from online ads in China reached $4 billion last year. The U.S. online ad market last year reached $26 billion. 80% of Jiayuan's revenue now comes from paid messaging.

by Loretta Chao
See full article at WSJ

See all posts on Jiayuan.com

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Jiayuan.com Slammed as “China’s Largest One-Night Stand Site”

Posted on August 18, 2011

Jiayuan logo new PENN OLSON – Aug 17 - Jiayuan was attacked by state media’s People’s Daily for not really being a “wedding” site, as Jiayuan’s tagline suggests, but more like an organizer of over-expensive group date nights that result in lots of inappropriate touching and other malarkey. The People’s Daily recounts the story of one 30-year old man who was annoyed at being – he felt – tricked into buying virtual credits. The newspaper is more concerned with the pricier products that Jiayuan sells, such as its hand-curated match-making service for 40,000 RMB (US$6,300), and maxes out at 200,000 RMB. A lack of a real name policy on Jiayuan is also called out.

by Steven Millward
See full article at Penn Olson

See all posts on Jiayuan.com

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Jiayuan Announces Q2 2011 Financial Results

Posted on August 12, 2011

Jiayuan logo new PR NEWSWIRE – Aug 10 - Jiayuan.com International, operator of the largest online dating platform in China, today announced its unaudited financial results for the Q2 '11. Net revenues were RMB 83.3M ($12.9M), representing a YOY increase of 121.0%. Operating income was RMB 6.1M ($0.9M), representing a YOY increase of 132.2%. Jiayuan had 5,429,176 average monthly active user accounts, an increase from 3,686,260 in Q2 '10. The number of average monthly paying user accounts was 1,139,171, representing an increase of 130.1% from 495,036 average monthly paying user accounts in Q2 '10.

The full article was originally published at Sun Herald, but is no longer available.

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JiaYuan CEO Interview, Rose Gong’s Founding Story of JiaYuan, and the Secret to Her Success

Posted on July 19, 2011

23 OPW – July 19 – We’re very honored to offer you this interview from the CEO and Founder of JiaYuan. The top dating site in China. Here’s our interview with Rose Gong Haiyan. JiaYuan is the top Internet Dating site in China, and IPO’d in May 2011. See all news on JiaYuan. See latest stock price and trending. – Mark Brooks

What’s your founding story?
I founded Jiayuan in October 2003, when I was in the second year of my Master’s program at Fudan University.  Since I was already an “older” single woman at the time, I registered for several dating sites and I was frustrated with the whole process. I was receiving correspondence from both single and married men.

Additionally, I signed up for a dating site that was hosted by a match-making agency. The site featured images and profiles for lots of male members, many of whom were attractive and appealing to me as a girl who was “looking for love.” I paid RMB500 for join this site so I could contact them. I sent out 12 emails to different men but nobody responded to me. One of the men had a mobile phone number on his profile, so I was brave enough to call him to ask whether he had received my emails.  The man was shocked, and said he had never registered on the dating site. That is how I discovered that most of the profiles on this site were fake.

I saw there was a real need for a serious, quality marriage/dating site, and this gave me the confidence I needed to create that site, for me, and people like me, to find their life partner.

At the time, there were already several hundred dating sites in China. There were no big funds (private equity or venture capital) paying attention to this field. Many people set up dating sites simply because they had a little extra money, and were interested in the Internet. Most people in this arena didn’t really understand online dating or social networking. Many of these sites were just imitating and copying each other, with little or no creativity or innovation.

Although I had been an Internet user for several years, I didn’t know anything about the technology. So I began to work with some friends who had studied computers. I applied for a domain name, and spent RMB300 to rent a server with 100MG space. Then I used Frontpage to learn to design web pages. After three weeks, on March 8, 2003, the first version of Jiayuan was officially live.  Two months later, I ran out of money after spending RMB17600 to purchase a new server. So I borrowed RMB100,000 from an internet friend in Yiwu, Zhejiang, in return for quite a few stocks. Today, my friend has earned over 1000 times return on his investment.

The first 1000+ members were primarily family and friends. It was very difficult. Fortunately, after several months, the site began to draw attention from the mainstream media in China. At the same time, I also met my husband on the site. Soon, we received investment from Qian Yongqiang, the founder of New Oriental Education (NYSE: EDU). And we received VC investment in 2007.

In 2006 we partnered with the MSN China, and in 2007 with SINA.  Then, in 2008 we partnered with TV dating programs. We had 1 Million users in the first 3 years and now we just grew ~1 Million users in 20 days.  We now have over 40 Million registered users.

Congratulations on your successful IPO. You raised $74 Million in the IPO. How will you invest it?
We will invest the IPO proceeds in new business, such as mobile dating and new markets . New markets such as the second, third and fourth tier cities in China. China has 253 cities with populations over 500,000, and our current coverage is not enough.

Do you have any plan for acquiring or working with other websites?
My attitude is to go with the flow. If we have good acquisition targets, we will consider them.

Do you think other Chinese dating sites may seek IPOs in the next year? How is the financing environment (both public and private) in China for the online dating industry?
I believe the no. 2 and no. 3 dating sites [Zhenai and Baihe (then 51Taonan)] in China also want to go public. Whether they will be successful or not depends on their operating results, their sustainability and the overall market environment. At present, we account for 76% of the market share in terms of time spent, and 44% of the market share in terms of revenue according to iResearch, far ahead of our other competitors.

How do you see the competitive landscape changing in the next 1-2 years? What do you think will be the most important changes for the industry in general in the next 2 years?
I think because Jiayuan successfully went public, there will be more capital entering into this field, and the competition will become more fierce. In the future, many small sites will have to exit the market, while the large ones will become even larger and stronger, and form a benign circle. The current competitive advantages of Jiayuan are: more users, more effective, less expensive (or free). During this time we have also built certain barriers to entry, including brand, reputation, user network, user experience, capital, and many years of experience in studying the psychology and experiences of Internet dating users. All these barriers to entry will take time for newcomers or other competitors to break through.

Your revenue model is focused on microtransactions — charging for messaging or "poking" other profiles — rather than on subscriptions. How do you expect the revenue model to evolve in the next 2-3 years?
Our pricing model is a result-based model. It is fair and reasonable, and very successful. It also has plenty of room for growth.  The shortfall of this model is that people who don’t have good (or any) results, will not pay and don’t have to pay. We are designing new models to complement or improve the current model.  

Your online services accounted for 83% of the net revenue in the first quarter, and events and VIP services accounted for 15% of revenue. Do you expect the breakdown to change in the next year?
I think the ratio will remain the same. Although our VIP services business grows very fast. Dating events are restricted by such factors as time (only holidays or weekends) and weather (fewer people will attend if it is raining). Therefore this ratio won’t change too much in the future.

Any successful experiences to share with aspiring entrepreneurs?
I think that the most important thing to remember when you host a website, is to truly create value for users, rather than focusing on making money at the beginning. When the users really need your products and services, making money becomes easy.

Read the Chinese version of the interview here.

See all posts on JiaYuan

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Jiayuan, Chinese Internet Stocks Volatile

Posted on July 17, 2011

Jiayuan logo new MARKETWATCH – July 15 - On Thursday afternoon, Jiayuan.com's stocks soared 9.8%. At the same time, several Chinese Internet stocks were in the red: Youku.com, down 5.6%, mobile app store Sky-mobi, down 5.4%, and online marketplace E-Commerce China Dangdang, down 6.4%. Buyers rush into the stocks as they debut and try to flip them quickly. That’s when short-sellers begin to move into the space.

See full article at MarketWatch

See all posts on Jiayuan.com

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