Momoemoitcon
Momo Emoticon Market

Location-based social app Momo, launched 4.0 version with an emoticon market and subscription offerings, an obvious move for monetization.

The emoticon part must remind you of LINE, the Japan-based messaging app that made about $17 million from emoticons alone in Q1 2013, and the subscription model is a proven one in China, adopted by almost all kinds of Internet service for monetization, and still believed to be a good business model here.

The subscription package offers twelve privileges; for instance, subscribers can follow more users and have more people in a chatting group. It is sold for 12 yuan (about $1.9) per month or 30 yuan per quarter. Itโ€™d be cheaper if you subscribe to it for a year.

The package also includes free emoticons or discounted ones. Of course you can buy them directly if you want more. A virtual currency, Momo Coin, is introduced for the convenience of purchases. The most expensive emoticons are for about 12 yuan each, or 10.8 yuan for subscribers โ€” it sounds very expensive to me. However, Iโ€™d soon be reminded that Chinese users would spend several hundred yuan on a QQ Show, a virtual costume or item created for Tencentโ€™s QQ IM. And LINE also has justified the model.

Momo, launched in August 2011, announced 30 million users in March this year. It raised $2.5 million funding from Matrix Partners in 2011 and $40 million Series B funding from Alibaba Group, DST and Matrix Partners in August 2012.

Tracey Xiang is Beijing, China-based tech writer. Reach her at traceyxiang@gmail.com

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