Chinese tech giant Alibaba is doubling down on artificial intelligence to spur the growth of its e-commerce division, after founder Jack Ma wrote an internal memo saying the era of AI e-commerce “has just begun.” The company’s domestic and international retail businesses are testing multiple AI-driven tools and are on a hiring spree for AI-related roles, according to local outlet LatePost.

Why it matters: Alibaba hopes that by integrating generative AI into its core e-commerce business, it will further boost sales in the highly lucrative sector and create new forms of customer experience to up business retention rates.

Details: Taobao and Tmall Group have channeled their AI focus into four key areas:  marketing platform Alimama, customer apps, merchant apps, and industry-specific apps. Before the reorganization led by Alibaba’s chief technology officer Wu Zeming, there were around 20 teams within the group exploring AI-related businesses, the report said.

  • This year’s Singles Day shopping festival, which started in late October, was a testing ground for Alibaba-created AI shopping assistants, including Taobao Wenwen, a chatbot designed for consumer-facing interaction that relies on its pre-trained generative ability to provide users with shopping recommendations. 
  • The firm also introduced at least ten free tools for merchants to assist in their marketing and merchandising efforts during the month-long bonanza. While Alibaba kept silent on sales achieved during the festival this year, it announced that the Wenwen chatbot engaged with over five million users, and the merchant tools were used over 1.5 billion times.
  • Enabling businesses to achieve lower operation costs through generative AI solutions is seen as a commonality among Alibaba’s AI products. Earlier last month, in a pilot launch event of Aidge, a tool facilitating features from translation and marketing to localized content and design, vice president of Alibaba International Zhang Kaifu said that it is dedicated to “simplifying global operations for small and medium-sized enterprises.” 
  • Zhang also leads AI initiatives within Alibaba International Digital Commerce Group, overseeing a team of more than 100, according to LatePost, with one-third engaged in training large language models.

Context: AI appears to be a top priority in Alibaba’s strategy since new management took over in September. In his first letter to all staff, CEO Eddie Wu announced “user first, AI-driven” as his vision for the 24-year-old company, a business that has recently been overshadowed by rivals. “We will realign our operations and refocus our business around these two core strategies,” said Wu.

  • An employee posted a critical note on an Alibaba internal forum after Temu parent PDD closed in on  the company’s market valuation late last month, a move that prompted Jack Ma’s rare appearance with him calling on staff to provide more constructive comments and suggestions, especially innovative ideas to the group.

Cheyenne Dong is a tech reporter now based in Shanghai. She covers e-commerce and retail, AI, and blockchain. Connect with her via e-mail: cheyenne.dong[a]technode.com.