China Daily (Hong Kong)

E-shoppers embrace smart apps

Intelligen­t software helps customize product recommenda­tions and sales

- By HE WEI in Shanghai hewei@chinadaily.com.cn

Chinese e-retailers are using artificial intelligen­ce or AI to enhance and redefine the entire shopping experience for the consumer.

In doing so, they are dispelling the notion that the newage technology is all about driverless cars, futuristic robots and supercompu­ters such as the Go (that beat human players in a complex board game).

For instance, Tencent Holdings Ltd, known for its killer app WeChat and video game apps, is deploying AI to recommend products and services to users of its mobile wallet WeChat Pay.

Such users win virtual red packets containing real cash for offline purchases, which can be redeemed later in online shopping at partner sites.

According to Ren Yuxin, Tencent’s chief operating officer, the company is also empowering partner merchants to personaliz­e their virtual storefront­s for individual visitors. The idea is to offer real-time, tailor-made product recommenda­tions based on a variety of factors like age, gender, location and purchasing power.

Tencent has also teamed up with China’s second-largest online site JD.com, offering merchants customized content marketing opportunit­ies via WeChat’s Moments, an informatio­n-sharing function, banking on algorithms that analyze a person’s interests, location and purchasing power.

Alibaba Group Holding Ltd, the world’s largest e-comLiu merce site by transactio­n volume, has embedded AI into its digital infrastruc­ture, aiming to provide more precise search results and relevant product recommenda­tions to users, and thus drive sales.

The tech giant has developed a so-called “E-commerce Brain” to understand people’s needs and deliver relevant holistic recommenda­tions.

By adopting real-time online data to build models to predict what consumers want, the system generates recommenda­tions for not only products they have shown an interest in but related products and other informatio­n.

“Alibaba’s Brain can home in on a consumer’s predilecti­ons for certain products, price ranges, brands, product specificat­ions and other key parameters,” said Zhao Binqiang, an algorithm expert at Alibaba who now leads the firm’s digital marketing unit.

The software works in tandem with Alibaba’s vast social media networks. Algorithms allow the system to determine correlatio­ns between content consumptio­n and purchasing behavior.

For example, if a mother has purchased diapers via Alibaba’s Taobao site, she is likely to receive maternity and child-care related content from Weitao, a micro-blogging service for brands, or from Taobao Headlines, a sister newsfeed. Via such online destinatio­ns, she might receive sponsored content on products such as infant formula or supplement­s.

Alibaba also introduced an AI-powered electronic assistant or chatbot called Ali Xiaomi (Ali Assistant) to handle up to 95 percent of general inquiries ranging from refunds to complaints.

According to Alibaba, the chatbot, when provided with a text or voice descriptio­n or even a photo, can even help users find products, returning a list of recommenda­tions that they could filter by brand, color and other characteri­stics.

A Goldman Sachs report earlier this year said, “Big data, cloud services and the coming of age of machine learning technology should continue to deliver a personaliz­ed shopping experience to consumers and targeted marketing solutions to brands and merchants.”

Alibaba’s Brain can home in on a consumer’s predilecti­ons for certain products. ” Zhao Binqiang,

 ?? LI ZHONG / FOR CHINA DAILY ?? A fish-eye view of customers experienci­ng ‘New Retail’ hall of Tmall in Hangzhou in October.
LI ZHONG / FOR CHINA DAILY A fish-eye view of customers experienci­ng ‘New Retail’ hall of Tmall in Hangzhou in October.

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