By Sue-Lin Wong
SHANGHAI (Reuters) - Despite being blocked in China, TWITTER (TWTR.NY)
This week, the popular microblog platform has made presentations to prospective Chinese clients in Shanghai on the sidelines of the inaugural Consumer Electronics Show Asia.
"It's not a coincidence that we are here now," Peter Greenberger, director of sales for emerging markets at Twitter, told Reuters on Tuesday.
"This seems to be a moment in time where Chinese corporations really feel the urge to be global and in fact, there's even a mandate from the government saying 'go global', which is exciting."
The San Francisco-based company already works with Chinese smartphone maker Xiaomi, online shopping giant Alibaba Group
Twitter collected $436 million in first-quarter revenue from advertisers who paid to inject their ads, known as "promoted tweets", in to Twitter users' timelines. The company has 302 million users worldwide.
The Chinese authorities have rendered the microblog unavailable in China without a virtual private network (VPN) since 2009. Still, Chinese entities, including the state news agency Xinhua, use the platform to reach audiences abroad.
Domestically, the Sina Weibo microblogging platform and Tencent's <0700.HK> WeChat messaging app are widely used.
"Obviously we hope the government will change their minds about us but until then, we can only do what we can do which is to help companies go out, that's where our opportunity is,"
said a Twitter source when asked about Twitter being blocked in China. The person was not authorized to speak to the media and declined to be identified.
In a keynote speech on Tuesday, Twitter Vice President Shailesh Rao told a largely-Chinese audience how business leaders such as Tesla Motors
"We've tried lots of different ways to advertise to overseas customers but at the moment we're focused on using Twitter, Google and Facebook," said Liu Dongchuan, director of advertising at Boyaa <0434.HK>, a Hong Kong listed online game developer that began advertising on Twitter in August last year.
"The reason is because you know these users are real users, active users, not zombie users."
(Editing by Kazunori Takada, John Ruwitch and David Evans)