Xiaomi has been surprising the consumer electronics industry with its innovative and affordable products since its inception.

Founded in 2010, the startup quickly became a smartphone leader in the Chinese market. Its success was attributed to its innovative e-commerce tactics — gave it a kind of first-mover advantage and a rise in the demand for smartphones. The success party, however, didn’t last long as others started using the same tactics and rolled products with similar features and price ranges.

As a result, it lost its Chinese market share of the smartphone to companies like Oppo, Vivo, and Huawei. Xiaomi soon realized that the Chinese smartphone market has become saturated and in order to keep the pace of growth, it needs to expand globally into markets that are yet to be saturated.

Hence started Xiaomi’s global expansion plan which has been in an on-going mode for quite some time. The journey of Xiaomi by now has not been smooth by any measure and faced a lot of challenges. Also, Xiaomi implemented new business strategies along the way. An account of all of this we have brought in this article for you.

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The Global Expansion Plans of Xiaomi

Xiaomi was founded in 2010. The privately-owned Chinese electronics company ventured into the smartphone market with the launch of Xiaomi 1S (released in August of 2011), selling over 300,000 pieces in that fiscal year.

In 2012, the sales numbers increased by 2400%, with the launch of Xiaomi 2S and 2A models, which were a significant improvement over its predecessors. With the addition of flagship models with improved features at stunningly low costs, the sales soared exponentially and by the end of 2013, Xiaomi was valued at $10 billion.

In 2014, Xiaomi took the smartphone world by storm by introducing flash online sales and sleek marketing strategy. In India alone, they claimed to have sold 1 million smartphones by partnering with Indian e-commerce giant Flipkart.

These marketing tactics were a huge success, as Xiaomi sold over 61 million phones in 2014, whilst earning the third spot on the list of biggest smartphone makers on a global scale. By the end of 2014, Xiaomi was valued at 45 billion dollars making it the most valuable startup in the world.

And then the fall:

Sales figure from 2015 came as a disappointment as Xiaomi sold merely 70 million phones that year, which though was an improvement over previous year’s numbers, fell short of their speculated sales target by 10 million.

The table for Xiaomi started turning in the second quarter of 2015 when Huawei toppled it as a top smartphone vendor of the Chinese market. Looking back at the global sales data from the first quarter of 2015, the situation was imminent.

Let’s win back move:

The most valuable startup in the world (now dethroned by Uber) knew well that global expansion was the key to achieving the top spot. If they wanted to soar higher in the consumer electronics market, they needed to expand beyond China, especially in the USA.

Before reaching its Zenith, Xiaomi had already forayed into other Asian markets including Singapore, Malaysia, Philippines, Indonesia, Hong Kong, Taiwan, and India, with plans to expand to other international markets as well.

On June 30th of 2015, Xiaomi made its first foray into the international market by expanding its operations to Brazil, with the launch of Redmi2.

Soon after, the second quarter reports of 2015 emerged, and in an attempt to chase the #1 spot, Xiaomi’s co-founder Bin Li went vocal about its global expansion plans encompassing the US as well.

Earlier, the company had slowed down its expansion plans in order to learn more about each market it enters. But that was no longer the case. Xiaomi entered the swift expansion mode. In November 2015, they expanded sales to the African continent: Specifically Kenya, Nigeria, and South Africa.

Xiaomi even succeeded in penetrating the US and European markets via its online MI store albeit limiting sales to smartphone accessories and activity trackers. The move (limiting sales of handsets in the US market), though marketed as a precursor to gauge the reaction of consumers, had a big reason beneath it: The lack of patents.

Patent Strategy of another company revealed here: What Twitter’s Patent Acquisition Strategy is Like?

Biggest Hurdle in Xiaomi’s Global Expansion Plan: Patent Lawsuits

In India, Xiaomi faced its first setback when the Delhi High Court issued a temporary order and blocked Xiaomi and its distributor Flipkart from importing, marketing and selling smartphones that were infringing Ericsson’s eight patents. It was one of the biggest lawsuits that Xiaomi faced by a big company.

Similarly, in the US, it received a not-so-warm welcome with a patent lawsuit by Blue Spike over its upcoming devices MI 5 and MI 5 plus.

Even in its home country, China, Xiaomi couldn’t avoid patent lawsuits. The recent allegations of Yulong Computer Communications Technology (Shenzhen) Co. Ltd, owned by Coolpad Group, has put Xiaomi in another lawsuit for infringing Coolpad’s 3 patents related to smartphone app icon management and other UI elements. The lawsuit was filed on 26 January 2018 in Guangdong Province Shenzhen Intermediate People’s Court.

Though Xiaomi yearns for global expansion, it lacked a strong patent portfolio. And to top it all, most of its products resemble other existing products. For instance, in 2014, Mashable called out MIUI (Xiaomi’s customized version of android) a blatant iOS ripoff.

These all factors in unison made it imperative for Xiaomi to boost its patent portfolio by acquiring third-party patents – which was long anticipated. Broadcom, a semiconductor company based out of the US, transferred 19 patents to Xiaomi, pinpoints an assignment of the USPTO.

With all these factors in mind, and to answer few questions that were in our curious head, we accessed the patent portfolio of Xiaomi, which has been filing patents since 2009, to see what the Chinese Apple is up to in terms of innovation.

A side note from the author: Just like this analysis of Xiaomi’s patent portfolio to understand their innovation trend, we also analyzed the patent portfolio of Twitter. So in case if you’re looking to buy Twitter, this article can surely help decide how much it should be worth.

How Many Patents Does Xiaomi Have?

Xiaomi now has more than 28,000 patents in its portfolio globally (14,000+ unique patents per family) with more than 60% Chinese patents. The 2015 and 2016 were the best years for Xiaomi in terms of patent filings the company saw the biggest growth in its portfolio in those two years. After that, the filing active went down but the company still knows the value of patents.

Here’s a chart showing how Xiaomi’s patent filing grew over the course of the past few years:

Even though the earliest patent in Xiaomi’s portfolio dates back to 1995, Xiaomi filed its first patent in 2010.

All of the patents appearing in its portfolio before 2010, were the result of patent acquisitions and were mostly of the US origin. We got curious and decided to dig deep to see the origin of these patents. Our analysis revealed that out of these 652 patents, Intel Corporation was the original owner of the 321 patents.

Between Xiaomi’s dream to penetrate the US and other global markets, the biggest roadblock was a thin patent portfolio. In house, the patent filing was not a viable option as it might have taken another decade to build a considerable patent portfolio. Xiaomi strategy hence included patent acquisition alongside with in-house patent filing.

Xiaomi filed its first two patents on 27th Dec 2010. The third patent of 2010 in Xiaomi’s portfolio was originally filed by the China Academy of Telecommunication Technology. Other than 3 Chinese patents, Xiaomi also has 8 US patents dating back to 2010, which originally belonged to LSI Corporation (which was acquired by Avago Technologies in 2013, which later merged with Broadcom Corp).

In 2011, Xiaomi added 59 patents to its portfolio. Out of these 59, 14 patents belonged to Broadcom Corp (more details in a later section) and the rest were filed by Xiaomi itself.

With 396 patents, Xiaomi’s patent filing almost skyrocketed in 2012. Out of these 396, most of the patents are the result of their patent acquisition deals. Three out of these patents were acquired from Broadcom Corp, and few of the rest were filed by Xiaomi in China.

In 2013, Xiaomi’s patent filing kept a rising trend. The Millet Company filed 1077 patents that year. In 2014, Xiaomi beefed up its patent arsenal by adding 2693 patents, hundreds of which were a result of various patent acquisition deals (more details below in the acquisition section)

“We’re building our own portfolio of patents for defensive purposes, because you kind of have to have that. Think of it as a war chest of sorts. We’ve filed over 2,000 patents, which is actually a lot, and we’re acquiring patents”, Hugo Barra in one of his interviews with Bloomberg.

Which Countries, other than China, Xiaomi is has patents in?

The chart below represents the geographical distribution of Xiaomi’s patent portfolio. These are the countries where Xiaomi has filed patents in:

Xiaomi has a majority of its patents, 17361 to be precise, in China. After China, the USA is the top second country where Xiaomi has 2553 patents in its portfolio. The increase in the number of US patents is an indication of Xiaomi’s increased efforts to enter the US market.

Of course, we intend to gain space in those major markets, U.S. and Europe, but we’ll only try it when we feel stronger and more mature. – Hugo Barra

Europe with 1542 patents is the top third country where Xiaomi holds the maximum of its patents, followed by Japan at the fourth spot with 933 patents. Interestingly, in our previous update of this article, Xiaomi only had 408 patents in Europe with no news about when they were planning to enter the market.

Xiaomi earlier was only selling accessories like headphones, fitness bands, and power banks since May 2015 using their retail stores. You could say that it was an attempt to build the market interest until they work on a stronger patent portfolio to finally make a big splash using their smartphones.

After 2 years of waiting, their portfolio grew stronger, Xiaomi felt enough confidence to enter Europe’s market by placing their first step in Madrid, Spain. The company launched Mi Mix 2 and Mi A1 smartphones in November 2017 in an event held in Madrid.

Then comes their presence in Japan which is currently almost zero. In terms of their patent portfolio, Xiaomi has pumped up its arsenal quite well throughout the years. Till 2016, with just 172 patents Japan was at the seventh place in top countries. And now, they have almost 1000 patents in Japan, taking it to top fourth place. Being a neighbor country, it makes sense to secure its invention as Japan could prove a valuable market especially when SONY is struggling in its smartphone business.

Next on the list is South Korea, where consumers have an appetite for the high-end smartphone at cheaper prices, which was vital for Xiaomi’s sales expansion outside the home country.

Interestingly, in an attempt to enter Korean markets, with 144 patents in its arsenal at that time, Xiaomi launched its first smartphone in South Korea on 4 January 2015 through mobile carrier KT Corporation. A couple of days later, on January 6, Xiaomi pulled back its smartphones from the Korean Market due to some legal matters, according to a report by the Korean Times. Speculations were that lack of Korean patents might be a strong reason beneath the matter.

Xiaomi took the lesson and further strengthened its Korean portfolio to make a foray into the market. Less than 6 months later, Xiaomi made a re-entry in South Korea by opening its first offline store in Seoul. At the moment, the company has 923 Korean patents in its arsenal.

India with 900 patents sits at the sixth spot followed by Russia at seventh with 785 patents. Xiaomi’s progress in India has been tremendous after the pullback that occurred with Ericsson’s lawsuit against them.

From then, India has been proved an interesting market for Xiaomi. Following Xiaomi, other Chinese smartphones also made an entry to the Indian market and now Xiaomi has many competitors in India.

Xiaomi overtook Samsung in 2017 and became the top smartphone company in India. Looking at just this year, they sold more than 10 Million devices in the 2nd quarter of 2018, a number that was never achieved by any smartphone company before. Even in 2019, the company had the biggest market share in India followed by Samsung.

As we have already talked about how their portfolio has grown at a different pace in different countries. Here’s a table to show you a full timeline of Xiaomi’s patent portfolio growth globally.

These are the top countries along with the patent count that the company received each year either by filing or acquisition.

Acquisitions – The Secret Way Xiaomi Planned To Expand Beyond China

Xiaomi has a dream of global presence which means entering into multiple markets. But one thing is sure; every country will be welcoming Xiaomi with warm patent infringement suits. Ericsson in India and Blue Spike in the US have already done that.

So should Xiaomi be worried?

Just as we said earlier, 2 years ago it would have been but maybe not now. Now though, Xiaomi dedicated efforts to expand their patent portfolio prove that they understood the importance of having an IP strategy in place to foray into global markets.

From 4702 patents in Jan 2016 to more than 28,000 patents currently (as of 20 March 2020), mostly by filing and partly by acquisitions, Xiaomi had significantly beefed up its portfolio. The company made some sizable patent acquisitions that would remove some thorns from the path on its way to global expansion.

Having said that, let’s see the list of acquisitions that Xiaomi did to beef up its patent arsenal:

Technology Transfer Agreement with Leadcore Technologies

As Qualcomm was facing some inevitable complications in China, the technology transfer was a major negotiation to the situation for Xiaomi. This led Xiaomi to Leadcore Technologies, a subsidiary of Datang Telecom and a renowned smartphone chip manufacturer in China.

In Nov 2014, Leadcore Technologies entered into a $US16.8 million deal with Beijing Sunggao Electronics, which according to TechWeb is a company controlled by Xiaomi. The purpose behind the deal was the acquisition of Leadcore’s core technology patents, reads a report by QQ.

The extracted patent portfolio of Xiaomi revealed the acquisition of 30 patents. These patents cover 4G and other chip-related technologies.

Ninebot acquired Segway with help of Xiaomi

In Apr 2015, Ninebot Inc., which claims itself as the first smart short transportation equipment operator in China, acquired Segway. As per a report by Bloomberg, the purchase also added 400 patents of Segway into the portfolio of Ninebot, parts of which are owned by Xiaomi.

In Oct 2015, Ninebot launched its first self-balancing scooter with which Xiaomi embarked on the field of transportation gadgets.

At the time of this acquisition, Ninebot was under patent lawsuits filed by Segway and Inventist. Being an emerging startup in the self-balancing vehicle industry, their patent portfolio was just as weak as Xiaomi had in its early days.

This acquisition was an exceptional strategic move by Ninebot; with the financial help of Xiaomi, they acquired Segway and freed themselves from the lawsuit. Another benefit was, they now had enough patents in their arsenal to counter sue Inventist (The Company with the first patent of Hoverboard). You can read the entire patent battle of Hoverboard industry and how a single patent just turned it upside down, from here.

Patent Assignment with Broadcom Corporation

In October 2015, Broadcom Corporation assigned 20 patents to Xiaomi. Most of the patents covered in the deal were of the wireless communication domain. Oblon was the law firm involved in this assignment.

Patent Licensing Deal with Qualcomm

Qualcomm, in December 2015, announced signing a patent licensing agreement with Xiaomi under which the latter will be paying royalties for its 3G and 4G smartphones. The deal helped Xiaomi include one out of two types of patents – related to wireless communication –in its arsenal. The other types of patents Xiaomi seeking is of smartphone designs and features.

Qualcomm’s patent licensing business is intriguing. It earns more than $6bn every year from licensing revenue. What’s the secret? We have conducted a deeper analysis of Qualcomm’s patent portfolio as well which you can find from here.

Patent collaboration with Guangzhou Feimi Electronic Technology

In 2014, an Investment subsidiary of Xiaomi, Tianjin Jinxing Investment, invested 4 million Yuan in Guangzhou Femini Electronic Technology which later filed 27 patents in collaboration with Xiaomi.

These patents also appeared in our extracted patent sets. From further analysis, we found the patent set disclosing technologies related to aircraft shock absorbers, remote control, design structures and the like.

This patent collaboration adds weight to the Xiaomi’s announcement of launching its first camera drone in 2016.

Patent Assignment deal with Foshan Gales Electrical Appliance Technology Co., Ltd.

Xiaomi already has a strong presence in providing smart home products, like air & water purifiers, smart webcams, and routers. In order to expand its intellectual property in this domain, Xiaomi has bought 104 patents from Foshan Gales Electrical Appliances. The company is a major manufacturer of home products like Juicers, water dispensers, etc.

Patent acquisition deal of Xiaomi with Intel

In December 2016, News surfaced about a new deal among Xiaomi and Intel. Intel, which is highly active among US companies to penetrate Chinese Semiconductor markets earlier entered into a strategic partnership with Chinese semiconductor company Rockfit, while having a significant stake in Tsinghua Unigroup- the company that owns domestic chipmakers Spreadtrum and RDA.

The deal with Xiaomi was two-fold. According to a report by Digitimes, in early December, on the quest to land Xiaomi as a major client, Intel introduced a free chip deal. For every notebook processor Xiaomi purchased, Intel gave away a free tablet processor. This move was speculated to be an attempt so that Xiaomi would consider ordering Intel-based smartphone solutions too.

Further to sweeten the relations between the two companies, the semiconductor giant transferred the ownership of 332 patents to Xiaomi. Most of these patents were originally assigned to Intel whereas some of these were owned by LSI, another semiconductor company, whose networking business was acquired by Intel from Avago(A Broadcom Corp company), who originally acquired LSI in 2013.

The Microsoft – Xiaomi Patent deal

To sell its handsets in the US market, Xiaomi signed a big deal with Microsoft to remove some obstacles from its US invasion plan in 2017.

The cross-licensing and patent transfer deal among the companies involves the acquisition of 1500 of Microsoft’s patents from its global portfolio, for which Xiaomi is believed to have paid $40 million.

Though the deal is official, Microsoft has yet not assigned the patents to Xiaomi yet. According to a report by Reuters, the patents belong to domains including voice communications, multimedia, and cloud computing.

The absorption of Ruichuan IPR funds

In September 2016, News surfaced that Xiaomi quietly absorbed Ruichuan IPR funds, a government-backed Chinese patent-holding company.

The two-year-old government-sponsored company was known to be seeded with $50 billion to acquire patents that could be used in action against US competitors. Xiaomi was known to have a sizable stake in the company, which was attempting to build a massive arsenal for use in harassment litigation.

Though it remains unknown on the kind or number of patents the company has, it would be an interesting addition to Xiaomi’s portfolio knowing its interest in global markets.

While the talk is on global expansion, it would also be interesting to note the companies that Xiaomi would consider acquiring to succeed in its quest. While there are a lot of potential candidates ripe for acquisition, two names top the list considering the IP advantage they would bring to Xiaomi’s portfolio.

Xiaomi Bought Patents From Nokia

Since the inception of Xiaomi’s global expansion plan, it has been into a lot of patents deal which helped it build a strong patent war chest. Its patent portfolio, however, is still incomparable to competitors like Samsung. To bridge the gap, Xiaomi’s efforts are on and the patent deal with Nokia is an effort in that direction.

On July 5, 2017, Xiaomi entered into business cooperation and patent agreement deal with Nokia. The number of patents involved in the agreement or the price tag of the deal is still classified.

The below statement by Nokia gives the gist of the agreement:

“Under the business cooperation agreement, Nokia will provide network infrastructure equipment designed to deliver the high capacity, low power requirements expected by large web providers and data center operators. Nokia and Xiaomi will work together on optical transport solutions for datacenter interconnect, IP Routing based on Nokia’s newly announced FP4 network processor, and a data center fabric solution. In addition, the companies have agreed to explore opportunities for further cooperation, in areas such as Internet of Things, augmented and virtual reality, and artificial intelligence.”

Besides the patent acquisition deal, Nokia also revealed that the company has signed a cross-license deal with Xiaomi for cellular standard-essential patents.

Patent deal with Casio

On July 6, 2016, Xiaomi bought patents from Casio, one of the most famous Japanese consumer and commercial electronics manufacturer that has been in the industry for more than 60 years. Casio has a wide range of products from calculators to musical instruments. They were the first company to build an all-electric calculator.

The patent assignment deal consisted of 59 US patents the majority of which were covering camera and image processing technologies. This acquisition will surely add fuel to Xiaomi’s pursuit to enter the US smartphone market.

350 Patent Assignment From Phillips

This was the first patent related news that popped up this year from Xiaomi. After a long break of almost a year, Xiaomi returned to their acquisition quest in August, when they acquired about 350 patents from Philips.

IAM media reported on this assignment first mentioning the lack of Chinese patents in the deal. The assignment contained about 130 US patents and dozens of patents from other countries including Japan, India, South Korea, Russia, and Turkey.

We analyzed the patents involved in this transaction and almost all of the assets are related to displaying technologies, especially OLEDs. Analyzing their entire portfolio could reveal more insights about how this transaction will add value to their product line, other than strengthening their patent portfolio.

Want us to dig deeper? Reach out to us here to get the full analysis conducted.

Licensing agreement with NTT Docomo for 5G Standard Essentials

Recently in September Xiaomi entered into an agreement with Japanese Telecom giant NTT Docomo for a global license of their 5G standard-essential patents. This agreement will help Xiaomi in building a 5G compatible device, which most of the market leaders like Samsung, Apple are already working on too.

Taking Over Meitu Hardware Business for Selfie-focused Smartphones

In Nov 2018, Xiaomi found itself in another deal and perhaps it made things easier for both of the parties. Xiaomi took over the hardware business of Meitu, a smartphone company that also has expertise in the software field as well particularly in image editing.

As per the deal, the future smartphone will have the Meitu brand but Xiaomi will be responsible for the whole production such as research and development, design, and sales. Meitu technology will help Xiaomi to make more selfie-focused smartphone and Xiaomi brand will help Meitu to entry in the bigger market.

MI CC9 Meitu Edition is the first smartphone developed from their collaboration.

The Innovation Game

Xiaomi, like a smartphone company, has seen both ups and downs. From selling 300,000 handsets a year to being the most valuable startup, to faltering sales, Xiaomi has seen it all.

Considering the tough competition other players like Huawei, Vivo, Lenovo poses, Xiaomi realized that Global expansion is the only way to stay ahead. In order to achieve its goals, Xiaomi has an actionable IP strategy that might open doors to opportunities in the global market.

But it is worth noting that despite having a sizable portfolio; Xiaomi has not made it to its top position. Why?

The problem with Xiaomi

Xiaomi’s rise was based on one simple advantage: It offered premium hardware and features at a fraction of offered by Apple or Samsung. But as soon as other Chinese manufacturers entered the market offering premium specifications at low prices, the danger was imminent.

Further, the competitors didn’t just manufacture premium devices at low costs, albeit added features that gave them an edge. For instance, Vivo offered curved screens, LeEco offered Exclusive content and Huawei offered dual-lens camera and fingerprint sensors in its handsets.

Xiaomi on the other side, despite having a sizable portfolio failed to take advantage and that serves as one reason beneath its small market share.

A strong portfolio, a huge fan base, holds over some pretty strong markets, what should Xiaomi do next to emerge as a leader?

Leverage its IP and Innovate. That is how Xiaomi could up its game.

Key takeaways from the analysis

Xiaomi’s expansion plan would be incomplete if it fails to get a hold over the US and European markets. The US, being an IP-intensive economy, would require some strong patents from Xiaomi to allow invasion in its markets.

Though Xiaomi had been taking steps toward reaching its goal, the road ahead isn’t really easy. With President Trump insisting on manufacturing products in the US itself and Huawei ban, Xiaomi might lose the low-cost advantage it offers if it has to start manufacturing its products in the US once it enters the market.

No matter what the case, US Expansion or not, Xiaomi won’t become a market leader if it continues to play on its low-cost advantage. Rather, it should take advantage of its beefed-up portfolio and bring innovative products to market that would ensure its success.

Innovation is the key.

Authored By: Nitin Balodi, Team Lead – Market Research and Shabaz Khan, Sr. Research Analyst – Market Research

Wondering what to read next? We love to perform portfolio analysis of companies to understand how they are innovating internally and how their IP strategy is changing over the years. Here’s one of our old cross-company analysis of the patent portfolio of Salesforce compared against Google, Microsoft, SAP, and Oracle. Click here to read.