Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

Alibaba to launch AI-powered sourcing engine for B2B e-commerce

Designed for small and medium-sized enterprises, platform interprets sourcing needs using natural language processing, Chinese company says.

alibaba Screenshot 2024-08-02 at 12.53.10 PM.png

Chinese e-commerce powerhouse Alibaba will launch an AI-powered conversational sourcing engine in September, saying the tool will revolutionize the global sourcing process for small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs), making it more intuitive and highly efficient.

Designed for B2B e-commerce, the sourcing engine synthesizes vast quantities of information, interprets sourcing needs using natural language processing, matches buyers with products and suppliers with unprecedented accuracy, and provides advanced tools for seamless sourcing decision-making, the company said.


According to Alibaba, that approach tackles the inefficiencies of conventional search methodologies which are often time-consuming, manually intensive, and involve laborious data categorization processes merely to locate suitable business partners and products.

“Traditional search engines evaluate web page importance through interlinking, credibility and ad spend. In this AI era, the B2B sourcing engine offers an intuitive and organic way to query, as well as rapidly and accurately match business buyers and business sellers based on their proven track record,” Alibaba President Kuo Zhang said in a release.

The launch follows the company’s move in 2023 to launch a generative artificial intelligence (AI) toolkit, branded “Aidge.” Part of the company’s Alibaba International Digital Commerce Group, that tool has been adopted by approximately 500,000 merchants, with daily API usage reaching 50 million calls. Deployed across over 40 e-commerce scenarios including product listing refinement, marketing, customer service, and automation, AI has significantly boosted content quality, click-through rates, conversion rates, and customer satisfaction, Alibaba says. For example, its features include a virtual try-on tool for apparel and a 24/7 AI customer service capability, which increased AliExpress Choice’s conversion rates from pre-sales inquiries by 29% in June.
 


 

 

Recent

More Stories

undersea fiberoptic cable

U.S., U.K., and Australia boost supply chain defenses

The U.S., U.K., and Australia will strengthen supply chain resiliency by sharing data and taking joint actions under the terms of a pact signed last week, the three nations said.

The agreement creates a “Supply Chain Resilience Cooperation Group” designed to build resilience in priority supply chains and to enhance the members’ mutual ability to identify and address risks, threats, and disruptions, according to the U.K.’s Department for Business and Trade.

Keep ReadingShow less

Featured

e-commerce order fulfillment platform software

U.S. shoppers embrace second-hand shopping

Nearly one-third of American consumers have increased their secondhand purchases in the past year, revealing a jump in “recommerce” according to a buyer survey from ShipStation, a provider of web-based shipping and order fulfillment solutions.

The number comes from a survey of 500 U.S. consumers showing that nearly one in four (23%) Americans lack confidence in making purchases over $200 in the next six months. Due to economic uncertainty, savvy shoppers are looking for ways to save money without sacrificing quality or style, the research found.

Keep ReadingShow less
Earth globe with location pins

CMA CGM offers awards for top startups

Some of the the most promising startup firms in maritime transport, logistics, and media will soon be named in an international competition launched today by maritime freight carrier CMA CGM.

Entrepreneurs worldwide in those three sectors have until October 15 to apply via CMA CGM’s ZEBOX website. Winners will receive funding, media exposure through CMA Media, tailored support, and collaboration opportunities with the CMA CGM Group on strategic projects.

Keep ReadingShow less
Hurricane Francine threatens supply chains

Hurricane Francine threatens supply chains

Businesses were preparing to deal with the effects of the latest major storm of the 2024 hurricane season as Francine barreled toward the Gulf Coast Wednesday.

Louisiana was experiencing heavy rain and wind gusts at midday as the storm moved northeast through the Gulf and was expected to pick up speed. The state will bear the brunt of Francine’s wind, rain, and storm damage, according to forecasters at weather service provider AccuWeather.

Keep ReadingShow less
strip of RFID tags

Supply chain managers at consumer goods manufacturing companies are tasked with meeting mandates from large retailers to implement item-level RFID.

Photo courtesy of FineLine Technologies.

Key technical considerations for RFID item tagging of nonapparel products

Supply chain managers at consumer goods manufacturing companies are tasked with meeting mandates from large retailers to implement item-level RFID. Initially these requirements applied primarily to apparel manufacturers and brands. Now, realizing the fruits of this first RFID wave, retailers are turning to suppliers to tag more merchandise.

This is one more priority for supply chain leaders, who suddenly have RFID added to their to-do list. How to integrate tagging into automated production lines? How to ensure each tag functions properly after goods are packed, shipped, and shelved? Where to position the RFID tag on the product? All are important questions to be answered in order to implement item-level RFID. The clock is ticking on retail mandates.
Keep ReadingShow less