No, it’s not Prince George Alexander
Louis but the precocious SQUAR of Myanmar, the once isolated Southeast
Asian nation’s own version of social networking site Facebook.
China has Weibo, the ‘Chinese Facebook’; Indonesia has Zuma; and now
Myanmar has jumped on the bandwagon of Asian countries seeking a virtual
place to meet, chat and do business, all with a truly local flavour.
What makes SQUAR unusual is that it is the initiative of two
outsiders – 37-year-old Rita Nguyen and 28-year-old Quynh Anh Nguyen.
Both are techies, born in Vietnam but brought up in the West, and quick
to spot the business potential in Myanmar.
Myanmar has undergone a sea-change after the reforms in 2010.
Elections have been held, a civilian government has replaced the
military regime, the country’s most celebrated ‘prisoner’, Nobel
laureate Aung San Suu Kyi, has been released from years of house arrest,
and Western sanctions have been lifted.
The government has been opening up the country to foreign investment,
and multinationals like General Electric and Coca Cola are rushing in
to do business.
SQUAR’s time too had come. Rita, a Canadian citizen, has 15 years of
experience in mobile gaming and social networking applications. Anh, her
partner in the project, is a business administration graduate who till
now had lived mostly in the U.S.
The inspiration came when Rita, a former executive with U.S. gaming
company Electronic Arts, moved to Vietnam three years ago to work with
the co-founders of VNG, the country’s premier digital platform, and
mig33, a popular social network in Asia with over 70 million users in
developing markets like Nepal and Bangladesh.
In January, Myanmar capital Yangon hosted BarCamp, the open-house
conference of techies from all over the world which was started in the
U.S. in 2005 to discuss technology and the Internet.
Though Myanmar, with a population of nearly 60 million, has one of
the lowest Internet penetration rates – about one percent – the Yangon
meet is said to have been the largest in the world, attracting over
6,000 participants.
Rita attended the Yangon event, her first visit to Myanmar, and found the “perfect storm” for her.
“The timing was perfect as I have been living in Asia for a few years and was looking for a new challenge,” she told IPS.
“I’ve built and launched online communities internationally for
almost a decade. Myanmar was an exceptionally cool challenge: how would I
build a community in a place that was so disconnected, both from a
geographic as well as technological perspective? So I convinced Anh to
move back to Asia from Seattle and here we are.”
“Yangon has a lot of youth and they host the largest BarCamp in
Asia,” Anh adds. “We thought it would be cool to create something to
connect the users and provide them the ability to share information.
Myanmar is quite cool right now. Everyone is interested in it.”
After a pre-launch in late June to test the waters, SQUAR is now up
and running. What’s more, it has already managed to snag a major
corporate sponsor.
In July, Coca Cola returned to Myanmar after a six-decade hiatus and
began a promotional blitzkrieg. Along with Facebook, SQUAR too was
involved in the online promotion of the ‘Coca Cola Happiness Journey’,
accompanied by roadshows in Yangon and Mandalay.
During its pre-launch phase, SQUAR was available only on mobile phones. Now it can be accessed on PCs, Macs and tablets.
Besides being in the Myanmarese language, SQUAR’s unique selling
point, according to Rita, is that it is built specifically for the
Myanmar market as it is today.
“We are highly focused on an open, public experience that encourages
[Myanmarese] nationals to discuss and share information with one
another,” she said.
“Facebook specifically is much more of a closed loop community
focused more on your personal relationships. In a country like Myanmar,
where most of your friends and family are not online yet, Facebook can
be a lonely experience. SQUAR is a place to find friends who are already
connected.”
One of the most active users is someone by the name of Phyonaing. The
new SQUAR user’s first post is a laborious instruction to fellow users
on how to use the keyboard to type in the local language.
Besides creating a platform where community meets technology in Myanmar, Rita says SQUAR can be used to boost business.
“SQUAR offers a unique opportunity in Myanmar to connect directly
with the youth of the nation,” she says. “This is why our partnership
with Coca Cola was so successful. They had traditional media (coverage)
but there was no real way to activate the youth directly with real-time
contests and promotions.”
That’s something SQUAR was doing daily for Coca Cola, leading up to the Happiness Journey.
Getting funds for the project – 500,000 dollars – was a piece of cake.
“Though not substantial, we did need some start-up capital,
specifically because Myanmar is so expensive to operate in,” Rita said.
“Raising the funds was incredibly easy through my own established
networks. Myanmar is a hot story and there is so much opportunity there;
so it wasn’t difficult.”
The major challenge was connectivity. Internet access in Myanmar is
limited and the speed slow, prompting Facebook pages like ‘I Hate
Myanmar Internet Connection’.
However, with Myanmar due to host the Association of Southeast Asian
Nations (ASEAN) summit in 2014, the government is working to improve
infrastructure, connectivity and telecom services.
In a landmark move in June, it awarded two new licences to Norway’s
Telenor and Qatar’s Ooredoo companies to provide additional mobile phone
lines.
These would be a blessing for initiatives like SQUAR.
Describing how they operate, Anh said they have an office in
Vietnam’s Ho Chi Minh City, where all the developers sit. There is
another office in Yangon with six staff members.
The plan now, she says, is to add new features that the community is
asking for. “This means creating fun and unique experiences for the
SQUAR community through contests, promotions and partnerships.”
Generating revenue is not a priority yet. “At the moment we are only
focused on ensuring that we are building the best social experience for
[Myanmarese] nationals,” Anh said.
Rita laughed off the question whether they are Myanmar’s Mark
Zuckerberg, Facebook’s founder. “Oh no, definitely NOT Zuckerberg,” she
grinned. “Too hot to wear hoodies here.”
source: IPS News
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