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You are here: Home / News / World News / Google China confident despite loss of Lee

Google China confident despite loss of Lee

September 10, 2009 By Northwest Asian Weekly

Kai-Fu Lee

Kai-Fu Lee

BEIJING (AP) — The new managers of Google Inc. in China expressed confidence on Sept. 8 that the business can grow despite the departure of the high-profile executive credited with expanding its share of the competitive Chinese market.

Kai-Fu Lee, who led Google China for four years, announced his resignation the week prior to launch a venture to finance Chinese tech startups. His departure had prompted questions about how Google will fare in a market dominated by local rival Baidu Corp.

“We have prepared well to improve our sales, do things better, and continue to serve our users and clients,” said John Liu, a former chief of China sales who is taking over Lee’s business duties, at a hastily arranged news conference.

A second executive, Boon-Lock Yeo, director of Google’s Shanghai engineering office, is to take over Lee’s engineering responsibilities.

Lee oversaw the launch of Google’s China-based service in 2005 and development of services that helped to boost its market share to 29 percent. But the Mountainview, California-based company remains at a distant second place behind Baidu, which has more than 60 percent of the market.

China has the world’s largest population of Internet users, with 338 million people online as of June, but foreign services have struggled to gain a foothold here.

Google announced an initiative Monday to attract more small Chinese companies to its paid search services by offering new advertisers free registration and a 500 yuan ($73) credit to pay its fees.

“Google remains extremely committed to this market. It is the most vibrant Internet market, perhaps in the entire world,” said Daniel Alegre, the company’s Asia-Pacific vice president for sales and operations.

Lee joined Google in 2004 from Microsoft, where he helped develop its MSN Internet search technology, including desktop search software rivaling Google’s. His hiring led to a court battle between the two companies that ended in a confidential settlement. ♦

Associated Press researcher Bonnie Cao contributed to this report.

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Filed Under: World News Tagged With: 2009, Associated Press, Baidu Corp, Bonnie Cao, Chinese, Daniel Alegre, Google China, Google Inc, John Liu, Vol 28 No 38 | September 12 - September 18, technology

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