tv Studio 1.0 Bloomberg September 4, 2015 7:00pm-7:31pm EDT
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so great to have you here. hugo: my pleasure. emily: how is the chinese? hugo: it is coming along slowly. come and two years from now. it is a hard language. emily: i understand they call you tiger brother. , a superstar in china did a simple post and said hugo is joining us from google. we have to give him him name. i had no say in it. either way, you are tiger brother. hugo: when are you going -- emily: when are you when to start selling phones in the u.s.? hugo: we don't have a set date. it is a huge undertaking.
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you have to have after sales service set up. it takes a huge amount of work plus localizing the hardware. we are not quite ready yet. emily: are you saying you will? hugo: we will someday. it will take having a team, a sizable team to manage the process operationally, ongoing engineering help and so on. emily: months away? years away? hugo: no less than a year away. blocked inle is china. is there a way forward? hugo: i don't know. it is a tricky issue. i don't think it is the end of the road for google and china. how useful google is, and the fact that people in china, universities, they depend
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heavily on google. despite the fact that it is blocked, i think someone is going to figure out a way to tove whatever issues exist bring all of this innovation to people in china. emily: how satisfied are you with the pace of innovation? hugo: i'm quite satisfied. i understand how hard it is to make progress. when you are supporting partners around the world, android is entering a new phase. there is basically a new and completely unexplored galaxy of possibility. emily: google doesn't it make money off of android and it is not doing well in terms of mobile advertising. they have built huge businesses off the backs of android. do you think making it open was the right call for google? hugo: android is the only call
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that google could have made. it would have been impossible to get the level of adoption we have seen. it just would not go anywhere. able to buildr be such an amazing developer story. it is the best decision google made, years ago. the fruit of that will be a long for many decades. emily: they pay apple billions of dollars to have google on the iphone. hugo: think about if android was not open. if the apps that were loaded were mandated by someone. think about what that would mean for google. it means that people would not necessarily make a choice of what browser to use, which search engine to use. when you have a closed operating system that mandates behaviors,
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it is unfair. it would be unfair for google and anybody else. absolutely one of the best thing that ever happened in tech in the last few decades. emily: do you think google would close android? hugo: google would never do that. there is absolutely nothing that would convince larry to do such a thing. emily: larry handed over a lot of control. what is your relationship? hugo: that was an amazing decision. he is capable, the most well-rounded executive at google. he is a great product guy. he is a great business guy. it frees up time for larry to think about what should google be 10 years from now, how do we think about artificial intelligence, how does it affect design for future product? it is hard to do both of those things at the same time. emily: you still have a relationship now that you are at xiaomi, you collaborate? hugo: we do. we are an android partner, first and foremost. we try to be in front of the pack when it comes to upgrading the operating system and using all the innovations coming from google. we spend time together every few months or so when i come and visit.
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emily: would xiaomi build its own operating system? hugo: we wouldn't for smartphones or tvs, or these products. simply because it doesn't make sense to do that. we would rather use that engineering horsepower building interesting the interesting services and capabilities on top of android that add value versus starting again. everyone who has tried has failed. despite having many more resources than we have as a startup, which we still are. so, we wouldn't. emily: johnny ives said you had stolen his design. how do you respond to that? ♪
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pushed me all along and still does by the way. emily: you founded your first company after college, a mobile speech recognition company that got bought by nuance communications. cthat now powers apple's siri. hugo: there is some amount of code. we don't know how much that made its way to the software that powers siri today. emily: you joined google in london. you worked your way up through the ranks. you became the public face of android. what was that ride like? hugo: i worked for a few really amazing executives and mentors, and then of course andy, one of the most brilliant in tech ever, a man so incredibly knowledgeable, and whose intuition about technology, thinking years and years ahead is completely unparalleled. i was lucky to be in the right place at the right time. emily: how did you come across this company, xiaomi.
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hugo: it was started by the two primary founders. ben was a colleague of mine at google. and then he left to do something new. i tracked all of that very closely. it wasn't until a couple of years that he brought their second-generation device. it was when i powered the device on and played with it the first time that it dawned on me those guys were not joking around. emily: tell me your first meeting. hugo: it was a four-hour meeting which tends to be the case. very deep, involved discussions. he is that kind of guy. it was a dinner in beijing sometime in late 2012. we spent time talking about
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everything from mobile to internet to brazil and cars. i found him to be one of the most fascinating people i've ever met. at the same level of somebody like andy rubin. his ability to understand consumers, think so many years ahead, four hours flew by like 10 minutes. it was amazing. and this was a translated conversation. emily: he did speak to you in chinese? hugo: in chinese. and ben translated. it was a surreal but amazing experience. emily: how do you decide to take this job? hugo: part of me you always wanted to try something. beyond that was a possibility that they may be doing something that would have a similar level of impact in the world that android did. emily: how did larry take the news? hugo: larry reached out and was
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supportive, but at the same time trying to see if that was really what i wanted to do. at the end of the day, everyone was supportive. in many ways i was leaving to continue what i had been doing on android. xiaomi would become one of the most important partners for the android team. it was like i was still in the family. emily: what are the differences? between working at a chinese tech company and google? hugo: there is a lot in between the lines in the culture. you have to be sensitive with what you say and who you say it in front of. xiaomi is a interesting mix of silicon valley work as hard as possible culture with traditional chinese culture. it is really interesting hybrid of things that you would see at apple, an absolute love for
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design and the culture of perfectionism. this is coming straight from our ceo. emily: is it a phone company, an electronic company, a software company? hugo: it is none of those. it is an internet company. that is the best way to describe xiaomi. we interact with our customers and users, or as we prefer to call them, our fans through the internet, through social media. we sell our products direct. we are the third largest e-commerce site in china. and the largest pure play by miles. we design products, taking a lot of input from the community. probably about 50% of all of the new features we end up building as part of our software came from the community. you can pinpoint it down to one user's idea.
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this is very unique. emily: you sell phones. high quality phones at cost. but you make most of the money by selling services, right? hugo: we think of hardware as a platform. we think about tv and tv boxes as a platform. on top of that we have a number of services and apps that we built that we have worked with partners to integrate. they work as a monetization channel for us. we have an ecosystem of gadgets and accessories which are products like power banks and headsets, but all sorts of other connective devices. we have an air purifier. we haven't action camera, security camera. emily: how much money do you generate? hugo: this year, we estimate we will have about one billion u.s. dollars from services alone. emily: you are invested in 30 different startups. hardware and software companies and they partner with you.
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what is the relationship there? what sort of cut do you get? what cut to the developers or makers of the product get? hugo: it is the unique model which i have not seen done anywhere else. the way it works is we help these companies get started. we will put the founders together, work together and build this. we will get them funded to start with, then we will leave them alone to operate independently. then we pick the best products they make and we put our brand on those products and sell it through our e-commerce engine. if these guys do a good job, they will enjoy success. some may go public before we do. they ship about one million of these a month. which makes them the small company the most popular fitness wearable devices in the world. emily: how is the money shared?
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hugo: they manufacture with a contract which we help them connect with, then they pay those guys and they sell it back to us and make margin. it is as simple as that. emily: how much? hugo: it varies tremendously. we make good margins through these products differently through our products. they make some margins. we make some margins. it is a good relationship. emily: what is the biggest revenue driver for xiaomi? hugo: it's still phones that drives most profits today without a doubt. the trend over time is for our services strategy to really grow and become the main profit engine for the company. emily: international growth. where is it working, where isn't it working? hugo: we are taking it slowly. we are paying attention to how markets react to our strategy,
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how we need to change things. we made our way to india and indonesia, two significant markets. india, in particular. emily: your model is being copied to certain extents. can you see where there is a micromax in india? hugo: our model is being copied left and right. both in china and in other markets. the way we respond to that is to continue to evolve. the companies that are copying us now are copying xiaomi from a year ago. emily: how does xiaomi live up to a $45 billion evaluation? ♪
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i've been the first to say it does look like the iphone 5. that edge, by the way, is present in so many other devices, but it was in many ways, people projecting their bias against chinese companies on to us. people could not bring themselves to believe that a chinese company actually could be a world innovator, could build amazingly high-quality products and, by the way, sell them for less than half the price of a high-end apple or samsung device. i think that drama has quickly started to vanish. i would point out, there is nothing you can point to that even remotely resembled it. emily: you don't think it looks like the iphone 6 plus? hugo: it is white. [laughter] hugo: how else does it look like the iphone 6 plus? emily: you said it comes down to one future, but as i understand it, the criticism was the look
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and feel of the product in general. hugo: i don't think that is fair. without a doubt, every smart phone these days kind of looks like every other smart phone. right? you have to have curved corners. you have to have at least a home button in some way. right? that's how interaction and design works. i don't think we can allow companies to take ownership of things that just are how they are. i think that if you look at what we have designed in the last 12 months, you will understand how much originality there is in what we do. and to be honest, i think you are going to see a lot more happening in the opposite direction, right? people taking inspiration on what we do. emily: the ceo is often compared to steve jobs. he doesn't like that comparison. he wears a black shirt. he does the one more thing. why does he do that? hugo: he's no longer wearing black shirts. he wears a blue button-down shirt. he has 50 of those.
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he wears them to the office every single day. one more thing was a joke. people just took it way too seriously. we don't take ourselves seriously at all. that day when the keynote happened, the room exploded. emily: on a more serious note, one of the reasons that you are not rolling out phones in the u.s. because of intellectual property issues. how protected are you if you do start selling in the u.s.? are you worried about patent law and potentially getting sued? hugo: of course we are all always worried about patent licensing and intellectual property. every company in this industry has had to deal with that. there are two things we are doing which take time. one is systematically taking patent licenses around the world. if it is a patent, it needs to be licensed. that is what we are doing. it takes time. we take those and talk to everyone we need to talk to. secondly we are building our own portfolio of patents. you have to have that for
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defensive purposes because you have to have that. think of it as a war chest of sorts. we have filed 2000 patents, which is actually a lot. we are acquiring patents. that is one of many factors that determines when we are ready to enter certain markets. emily: you and apple are jockeying for the top spot in china. what is happening is the smartphone market is saturated for the first time. how worried are you about that? hugo: china has moved into the replacement market. people already have a phone. every year they just want to buy a new phone. the replacement is actually coming down. people are more anxious to buy a new phone more often. there is a tremendous amount of room for us to grow even if the pie itself isn't growing. emily: would you ever make a car? hugo: we are not making a car right now just to be clear. i think that is an extraordinarily difficult task.
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it is not something that we can build today. we just are not resourced to do something like that, but why not? emily: you raised $1.1 billion. you are valued at $45 billion. why is xiaomi still private? hugo: i do think that moving fast and being able to change direction quickly is important for us. when you are a public company, you are more restrained in your ability to do that, to massively allocate investment into something that may not pan out for some time. so i think that being more flexible and being able to move quickly is the reason why we will be private for quite a long time. emily: what does an ipo look like? hugo: five years away. he has been giving the same answer for the last couple of years. emily: how does xiaomi live up to a $45 billion valuation? hugo: there are so many services and new products that people haven't even started thinking about.
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