Twitter’s China boss Kathy Chen quits after eight months

The microblogging service has shed a number of executives as it undergoes a shake-up

Twitter has lost another executive, with its managing director of Greater China Kathy Chen departing.

Ms Chen, who was appointed eight months ago, announced her move in a tweet sent over the weekend.

Twitter has been blocked in China since 2009 but is still used through virtual private networks (VPN).

Domestically, the Sina Weibo microblogging platform and Tencent’s WeChat messaging app are more widely used. But Chinese entities, including the state news agency Xinhua, use Twitter to reach audiences abroad.

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Ms Chen, who previously worked at Microsoft and Cisco, was brought in to lure more Chinese advertisers to Twitter. At the time, social media criticism focused on her early work with Chinese state-affiliated enterprises.

“Now that the Twitter Apac team is working directly with Chinese advertisers, this is the right time for me to leave the company,” she wrote.

Top Chinese advertisers

Twitter grew its Greater China advertiser base by nearly 400 per cent over the past two years, she wrote, making it one of the firm’s fastest growing revenue markets in Asia Pacific (Apac).

Twitter’s top Chinese advertisers have included Chinese smartphone maker Xiaomi, online shopping giant Alibaba Group, white goods producer Qingdao Haier and flag carrier Air China.

"We remain committed to this market," Ms Chen said, adding the company's Hong Kong office would remain open.

Twitter confirmed it would retain the Hong Kong office to serve Hong Kong-based clients, but declined to provide further details on Ms Chen’s departure.

The end of Ms Chen’s relationship with Twitter comes at a time when China is urging for greater internet curbs.

The country has condemned foreign social media as a hotbed for fake news and cyberterrorism, sending ominous signals to Western firms that are eyeing a piece of the Chinese market, home to the world’s largest population of internet users.

Cutting global workforce

“When China’s economy was really on fire it created enough smoke to obscure the realities of what foreign tech companies were really going to be permitted to do here,” says Mark Natkin, managing director of Beijing-based Marbridge Consulting.

“You are getting more companies who are beginning to question the value of the investments they are making here.”

The popular but money-losing microblogging service Twitter has moved its Chinese ad sales and support activities to its Apac headquarters in Singapore.

Twitter has been undergoing a significant shake-up, and not only in Asia, announcing in October that it would cut more than 9 per cent of its global workforce to keep costs down.

Parminder Singh, managing director for India, Southeast Asia and the Middle East, left the company in early November.

Managing director of Twitter Ireland Mark Little departed last month, while chief operating officer Adam Bain and chief technology officer Adam Messinger have also left the company in recent weeks.