Pu, 30, leads a team of about 30. She is confident of the success of her app since Chinese people, especially those living in big cities, have a habit of going to a therapist for body or neck massage.
Pu's confidence may also come from the good performance of another O2O app, Helijia, which allows users to order home manicure service.
The app gets an average of 6,000 orders daily from its users after its launch last March. Its founder Meng Xin had succeeded in running a brand of essential oil on a website and a restaurant using social networks, before setting up the nail beauty app.
Experts say the rise of O2O services in mobile web can be attributed to the switch of Chinese consumers' payment habit from using money to making electronic payment.
"The next five to 10 years will be a good time for Chinese app companies, especially for those who are overturning the traditional industry with mobile web," says Wang Liang.
"China's advantage is its large population of mobile web users. You can't imagine an app giant coming out of a country like New Zealand. But there'll be a lot of them in China and the US," he says.
Pu Qiantong is the first to take the offline market of traditional Chinese massage service into the mobile Web. With her app Huatuo Jiadao (Huatuo's Coming - Huatuo is well-known as a great physician in ancient China), mobile users can order house calls from a traditional Chinese medicine therapist, instead of having to arrange an appointment to visit a massage club in person.
A user can see from the app a therapist's previous work experience, the distance the therapist has to travel to his or her apartment and the assessment of the therapist's skills by others who have used his or her services.
Pu says her company has signed up about 100 therapists to provide home massage service in Beijing and Shanghai. Launched at the end of last December, the app had more than 5,000 mobile customers within one month.
The one-month-old app has just received a 10 million yuan investment. The company plans to attract users in 10 more cities in China this year.
"Online to offline service in the mobile Web market is definitely hot and popular. I expect more startups to come up this year," says Pu.
Pu, 30, leads a team of about 30. She is confident of the success of her app since Chinese people, especially those living in big cities, have a habit of going to a therapist for body or neck massage.
Pu's confidence may also come from the good performance of another O2O app, Helijia, which allows users to order home manicure service.
The app gets an average of 6,000 orders daily from its users after its launch last March. Its founder Meng Xin had succeeded in running a brand of essential oil on a website and a restaurant using social networks, before setting up the nail beauty app.
Experts say the rise of O2O services in mobile Web can be attributed to the switch of Chinese consumers' payment habit from using money to making electronic payment.
"The next five to 10 years will be a good time for Chinese app companies, especially for those who are overturning the traditional industry with mobile Web," says Wang Liang.
"China's advantage is its large population of mobile Web users. You can't imagine an app giant coming out of a country like New Zealand. But there'll be a lot of them in China and the US," he says.
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