Confessions of a China Live Streamer

Photo: Courtesy of Lauren Hallanan

“What do you do for a living?”

“I’m a full-time live streamer in China.”

Probably not the answer you would expect from a blonde-haired blue-eyed American woman like me.

But that’s right, for a yearlong period from spring 2016 to spring 2017 I was a professional live streamer streaming on several Chinese apps including Momo, Yizhibo, Meipai, and Huajiao. I had a total following of over 400,000.

I first began live streaming on the popular video sharing app Meipai with the intention purely of growing an audience. Then an agency that worked with Momo, a dating app that has now become famous for its live streaming, recruited me to stream on Momo. At that time, Meipai had not yet introduced gifting features, but Momo had, and the thought of earning money directly from live streaming was enticing, so I decided to give it a try.

With the help of the agency, my following grew rapidly and within a couple of months, I had nearly 300,000 fans on the Momo platform. I was making a full-time income from my live streaming, usually 20,000-30,000 RMB ($3,200-4,800) per month, the majority of which came from virtual gifts from my followers. This didn’t happen by chance; I took live streaming seriously and treated it like a job, streaming at consistent times, one to two times a day, for a minimum of 2-4 hours a day.

Seeing as the majority of streamers in China make less than 10,000 RMB ($1,600) per month, with my viewer numbers and income, I was considered an above-average streamer. Yet I was also far from the best. For the top one percent of Chinese live streamers, 100,000 RMB ($16,000) per month would be considered normal.

Time for a Change

Yet, despite my success, I quickly realized Momo wasn’t a good choice for me long term. Like many of the live streaming apps in China, the only way for streamers to earn money is through gifting. There are no e-commerce functions or any way to include links to other platforms. Even awareness campaigns that didn’t require links were frowned upon unless the brand went through Momo.

The longer I streamed, the more I disliked the gifting model and felt it would not be a sustainable source of income. I decided to transition to a new platform and focus more on becoming an influencer that live streams as opposed to a pure live streamer, which, by the way, are two very different things.

Different Types of Streamers in China

To clarify what I mean by that, I must first explain that, in China, live streaming has already become a mature industry with many different segments whose streamers, audiences, and monetization methods are all quite different. In general, we can break it down into three types: entertainment, educational and e-commerce.

1. Entertainment

Entertainment live streaming is the most common type where viewers are watching purely to be entertained. It consists of gaming live streams (an industry unto itself), dancing, singing, chatting, comedy, etc. For these streamers, their main source of income is gifts from fans, and they rarely do brand collaborations. Main platforms for this type of streaming are Douyu, Huajiao, Yingke, YY, and Momo.

2. Educational

The second type of streaming is educational, essentially meaning a live stream where people are coming to learn something. While this could be an actual live streamed class, it could also be a beauty influencer giving a make-up tutorial, a fitness guru showing people how to lose weight, or a food blogger teaching people a new dish. While these streamers will receive gifts from viewers, the majority of their income is likely to come from brand collaborations, or they might be using live streaming as a way to grow their following. Main platforms for this type of streaming are Yizhibo and Meipai.

3. E-commerce

The last type of streaming is e-commerce live streaming, which has become very popular in China over the past year. This type of live streaming is very similar to QVC or the Home Shopping Network. Viewers tune into this type of live streaming because they want to buy things and learn about new products. In China, where e-commerce is rampant with fake items, live streaming provides transparency and trust. The most common platforms for this type of live streaming are Taobao Live, JD Live and also Yizhibo, which can host links to Taobao and Tmall.

The Switch to Yizhibo

When I chose to move away from Momo my first choice was Weibo’s live streaming platform Yizhibo. Yizhibo is an amazing choice for influencers because the platform is synced with Weibo, meaning that every time I streamed, my stream would get shared on my Weibo page and my Weibo followers could easily click in and watch. On top of that, any new followers that I got on Yizhibo would automatically become my followers on Weibo as well. What’s more, besides appearing in the stand-alone Yizhibo app, my live streams also appeared in the live stream section on the Weibo app, meaning that I was exposed to Weibo’s massive user base.

Yizhibo’s viewer demographics were a better fit too, with what seemed like a worldlier, more educated audience and a more even male to female ratio. Many of China’s entertainment style live streams apps are notorious for their large gender imbalances with most of the streamers being female and oftentimes up to 70 percent of the audience male. In a complete reversal, e-commerce live streaming platforms Taobao Live and JD Live are dominated by females.

Being a Foreigner

Some may be surprised that being a foreigner both helped and hurt my growth as a live streamer in China. The most obvious way it has helped is that as a foreigner (who speaks Chinese) I stood out among a sea of Chinese streamers and was able to attract a large audience.

However, there were also a lot of drawbacks. As a foreigner, I had a lot more trolls than a Chinese Live streamer might. People wouldn’t give me gifts because I was a foreigner, and they didn’t want to “give a rich foreigner their money”.

And some might be wondering how I managed to live stream at all since, technically, foreigners are banned from live streaming in China. Let’s just say there are ways around it.

While not confined to foreigners, the real icing on the cake was the temporary ban on all live streaming outside of China that happened in June 2017. By then I had moved back to the US and was gaining significant momentum as a travel and lifestyle live streamer on Yizhibo. The ban on my account lasted for several months and, although I now have access to my account and I do stream occasionally, I have moved on to other things and am not streaming to the extent that I was before.

 

–This article originally appeared on Jing Daily.