Web Analytics

  • Law Asia
  • ABLJ
  • CBLJ
  • IBLJ
Register Login Subscribe
  • English
    • 中文 (Chinese (Simplified))
Resources
Awards galleryChina Business Law Directory - PRC law firmsChina Business Law Directory - Cross-border investment guide
Sections
NewsBusiness law digestDispute digestIn-house insightsPractitioners’ perspectivesCorrespondentsMarket watchLegal & regulatory insightsLexicon
Topics
New Company LawIntellectual propertyDispute resolutionCross-border investmentCapital marketsBankruptcy & reorganisation
Law.asia home
Archive
.TV
Awards
CBLJ Forum•Beijing 2026
Events
Jobs
About us
Contact us
Follow Law.asia

China Business Law Journal
English English
  • 中文 中文
China Business Law Journal

    • LinkedIn
      Facebook
      Twitter
      Whatsapp
      Telegram
      Copy link

      SECTIONS

      • News
      • Business law digest
      • Dispute digest
      • In-house insights
      • Practitioners’ perspectives
      • Correspondents
      • Market watch
      • Legal & regulatory insights
      • Lexicon

      ABOUT US

      • Editorial board
      • Publisher & credits

      TOPICS

      • New Company Law
      • Intellectual property
      • Dispute resolution
      • Cross-border investment
      • Capital markets
      • Bankruptcy & reorganisation

      RESOURCES

      • Awards gallery
      • China Business Law Directory - PRC law firms
      • China Business Law Directory - Cross-border investment guide

      E-READER EDITION

      ARCHIVE
      LinkedIn
      Facebook
      Twitter
      Whatsapp
      Telegram
      Copy link
China Business Law Journal China Business Law Journal
  • Sections
    • News
    • Business law digest
    • Dispute digest
    • In-house insights
    • Practitioners’ perspectives
    • Correspondents
    • Market watch
    • Legal & regulatory insights
    • Lexicon
  • Topics
    • New Company Law
    • Intellectual property
    • Dispute resolution
    • Cross-border investment
    • Capital markets
    • Bankruptcy & reorganisation
  • Videos
  • Awards
  • Jobs
  • Subscribe
  • Events
    • CBLJ Forum • Beijing 2026: Register
    • CBLJ Forum • Shanghai 2025: Report
    • CBLJ Forum • Beijing 2025: Report
    • Other events
  • Law Asia
  • ABLJ
  • CBLJ
  • IBLJ
  • icon
    • Login
    • Register
  • Law Asia
  • ABLJ
  • CBLJ
  • IBLJ

China Business Law Journal
  • Sections
    • News
    • Business law digest
    • Dispute digest
    • In-house insights
    • Practitioners’ perspectives
    • Correspondents
    • Market watch
    • Legal & regulatory insights
    • Lexicon
  • Topics
    • New Company Law
    • Intellectual property
    • Dispute resolution
    • Cross-border investment
    • Capital markets
    • Bankruptcy & reorganisation
  • Videos
  • Awards
  • Jobs
  • Subscribe
  • Events
    • CBLJ Forum • Beijing 2026: Register
    • CBLJ Forum • Shanghai 2025: Report
    • CBLJ Forum • Beijing 2025: Report
    • Other events
English English
  • 中文 中文
  • icon
    • Login
    • Register
Home Market pulse US-China lawyers ride ‘TikTok refugee’ wave on RedNote
  • Market pulse
  • News

US-China lawyers ride ‘TikTok refugee’ wave on RedNote

17 January 2025
0
238
LinkedIn
Facebook
Twitter
Whatsapp
Telegram
Copy link

TikTok users have flocked to the Chinese social media platform RedNote as the shutdown of ByteDance’s international subsidiary looms. Like many so-called “TikTok refugees”, US legal bloggers are testing the RedNote waters, while lawyers in China are taking advantage of the foreign user influx by posting English content.

Leslie Abrigo, a California-based partner at Genesis Family Law who previously has posted educational and marketing videos on TikTok, has recently joined RedNote along with many “TikTok refugees”.

To cater to the Chinese audience, she has included Chinese subtitles on her English-speaking videos posted on RedNote.

US-China-lawyers-ride-‘TikTok-refugee’-wave-on-RedNote

Abrigo told China Business Law Journal, “I debated whether to open an account on Xiaohongshu (also known as RedNote) because I was not sure if there would be a market for me as a family law attorney on this app.”

However, her experimentation on Chinese social media has been fruitful. “I have always wanted to interact with other attorneys in China, but I never knew how to do it. With Xiaohongshu, I am finding that not only am I meeting lovely people from all over the world, but some of them are attorneys, and that seems to be a good place to start to find out if there is a need for the services I offer.”

Lawyers from mainland China who usually post content in Chinese have taken advantage of the “TikTok refugee” trend and uploaded self-introductory posts in English.

Ryo Lu, a Shanghai-based partner at JunHe, who is among the first batch of users to dabble in this trend said, “When I posted the English post, I didn’t think about leveraging the TikTok refugee trend to promote my services. I just thought it was fun.”

Ryo-Lu-陆斯珮_
Ryo Lu

Lu, who specialises in data compliance and cybersecurity, said, “I think using RedNote to promote our services has a minimal effect on my practice area.”

She said lawyers at China’s top “red circle” law firms or those doing non-contentious work were less likely to rely on RedNote to promote their businesses as their main clients were mostly companies, with few being individual clients. They mainly obtain new business through meeting clients in real life or attending seminars hosted by the law firm.

Despite this, Lu said maintaining a social media presence could help build trust among clients. “Sometimes when I meet clients, they mention that they have followed me on RedNote, this might help bridge the gap between us,” she said.

Yvonne-Wong-s
Yvonne Wong

Yvonne Wong, an attorney at Yingke Law Firm in Shanghai, said, “As a lawyer specialising in cross-border civil and commercial disputes, I can build a personal brand on social media to gain exposure so that I don’t have to rely on other marketing platforms.”

Wong who practices international commercial arbitration and civil litigation said she would adjust her promotional strategy due to the increase of “TikTok refugees”.

“Currently, outbound legal services that involve representing Chinese individuals or companies are becoming increasingly competitive,” Wong added, “With that said, I believe there is still a large market out there so I will treat overseas clients as my target audience for some of my posts on social media.”

On 24 April 2024, US President Joe Biden signed a bill requiring ByteDance to sell TikTok, or else it would be banned in the US on 19 January 2025. As of 17 January 2025, at least 19 million posts including the hashtag “TikTok refugee” have been published on RedNote, with 1.1 billion views. On the same day, RedNote topped the download chart on Apple’s US App Store.

Leslie-Abrigo
Leslie Abrigo

How long the “TikTok refugee” trend will last remains uncertain, but Abrigo said she would continue using RedNote even if TikTok survived in the US.

“I plan to and will continue to use it to teach interested persons what lawyer life in California is like as well as the various pathways that are now afforded to people attempting to become licensed attorneys in the state,” Abrigo said.

“The added bonus to this platform, like TikTok, is that I see all the beautiful places, people and culture that we get very limited access to in the US. I am enjoying the app and hope to get some basic Chinese in my vocabulary over the next few months.

LinkedIn
Facebook
Twitter
Whatsapp
Telegram
Copy link
  • TAGS
  • ByteDance
  • California
  • China
  • Cross-border
  • Cultural exchange
  • International clients
  • Legal Professionals
  • Legal Social media presence
  • Marketing
  • Media
  • Personal brand
  • RedNote
  • Social Media
  • TikTok
  • TikTok refugee
  • US-China
Previous articleHow forced deregistration impacts civil proceedings
Next articleNew exits for shareholders under revised Company Law
Grace

RELATED ARTICLESMORE FROM AUTHOR

Sino Biopharm AstraZeneca Licence Agreement
Deal digest

Sidley steers Sino Biopharm, AstraZeneca licence agreement

Han Kun onboards Cherry Jin
Market pulse

Han Kun onboards shipping partner for Shanghai office

Nexchip’s HKEX listing
Deal Highlights

Firms steer top wafer foundry Nexchip’s HKD6.98bn listing

MOST POPULAR

CBLJ IHCA Feature Image

In-house Counsel Awards 2026

Following months of market research, we have selected these outstanding in-house counsel and their teams

22 June 2026
CBLJ FOTY 2026

China Business Law Awards 2026

28 May 2026
Rising Star 2026 Featured Image

The A-List 2025-26: Rising Stars

26 March 2026

CORRESPONDENTS

Preparing for Hong Kong’s paperless securities regime

By Stella Yeung and Stephen Luo, Jingtian & Gongcheng
2 July 2026

How can minority shareholders seek relief from profit hoarding?

By Jiang Xuan and Yang Yue, Zhong Lun Law Firm
29 June 2026

Infringement risks of AIGC in entertainment industry (Part 2)

By Jiang Shen and Xu Wen, Jingtian & Gongcheng
22 June 2026

FEATURES

China’s new environmental code

Bundled and binding

A 1,200-article code, five interlocking books, and one tighter leash on Chinese business. The clock to August 2026 is ticking

30 June 2026
不容有瑕

No flaws allowed

While stock exchanges lower barriers to atrract emerging sector issuers, regulators focus on accountability of listco and intermediaries at the top corporate level

25 June 2026
CBLJ IHCA Feature Image

In-house Counsel Awards 2026

Following months of market research, we have selected these outstanding in-house counsel and their teams

22 June 2026
A 1,200-article code, five interlocking books, and one tighter leash on Chinese business. The clock to August 2026 is ticking
Capital markets lower entry threshold but ramp up accountability

PRACTITIONERS' PERSPECTIVES

Preserving listing status against delisting red line

By Xu Zhiyuan, Tahota Law Firm
25 June 2026
IPO to M&A Shift

IPO alternative: Public M&A route to capital markets

By Kang Xiaoyang, Kangda Law Firm
25 June 2026
Red-chip restructuring in China

Unwinding red-chip structures

By Vincent Shen, Commerce & Finance Law Offices
25 June 2026

Lexicon

Lexicon

Cryptocurrencies and property

2 July 2026
LAW.ASIA

Asia’s leader in legal intelligence

Law.asia is an award-winning portal providing news, analysis and expert advice on business law in Asia to in-house counsel, lawyers in private practice and other business and legal leaders. It features the proprietary editorial content and archives of our premium legal magazines – Asia Business Law Journal, China Business Law Journal and India Business Law Journal – along with videos, law firm listings, awards and much more. Produced by Law.asia Limited, an independent media company, Law.asia is multilingual, offering content in English, Chinese, Japanese and Korean. Find out more.
Follow Law.asia
Law firms Awards Events Legal jobs • Post a job
About us Archive Subscribe Contact us
Please send any press releases, deal announcements, details of new hires, newsletters and any other news items to: news@law.asia
  • Policy on advertising & sponsorship
  • Disclaimer
  • Terms & conditions of use
  • Privacy Policy
© Copyright 2026 Law.asia Limited. All rights reserved.

Follow us on LinkedIn

Follow now