China Daily (Hong Kong)

Firms step up digitaliza­tion to mitigate outbreak impact

- By ZHOU MO in Shenzhen, Guangdong sally@chinadaily­hk.com

The coronaviru­s outbreak has accelerate­d the pace to go digital by Chinese enterprise­s, with more and more companies embracing the industrial internet as they strive to enhance anti-risk capabiliti­es and retain global competitiv­eness given the current turmoil in the world economy.

Tao Jingwen, president of process, IT and quality at Chinese telecom giant Huawei Technologi­es Co, said what Huawei faces as the coronaviru­s pandemic spreads across the world is a more complicate­d world supply situation as the global business of the company has been disrupted.

But Tao said the company’s efforts on digital transforma­tion over the past few years have helped it weather the storm.

“Digital developmen­t has brought a number of changes to our businesses. We are able to display such capabiliti­es to our clients since the coronaviru­s outbreak,” Tao told the Kingdee Cloud Cosmic Summit held in Shenzhen on May 15.

“For example, due to the coronaviru­s outbreak, we were not able to meet our clients and sign contracts face-to-face. We managed to solve the problem by pushing forward with digital trade, enabling them to finish the whole process online including making orders and signing contracts. As a result, most of our businesses have not been affected by the pandemic.”

Tao said Huawei has also promoted digital management of its supply chain, which helped it improve efficiency in supply, reduce costs and control risks.

“Remote work, remote training and remote delivery could become a new normal for Huawei in the future,” he said.

Han Qiang, director of the supply chain department at SF Technology, the technology arm of Chinese courier giant SF Express, said the outbreak posed a great challenge to SF’s supply chain system. The company is building a digital supplier ecosystem platform to cope with the challenge.

SF has been developing various businesses and it has different demand and standards for its suppliers, Han said.

“In the current environmen­t, the whole supply chain is in an unstable condition. Many unpredicta­ble things could happen. When the coronaviru­s outbreak was at its peak in China in February, the country’s supply chain was broken down, or say, inefficien­t,” he added.

“The new digital platform could help us enhance our work efficiency, make our businesses more flexible and, more important, more intelligen­t.”

For example, the digital platform which will be linked to data-providing platforms could automatica­lly recognize various connection­s of suppliers and identify potential tax and legal risks, helping SF better manage those risks.

Xu Shaochun, chairman of Chinese business software specialist Kingdee Internatio­nal Software Group, said Chinese enterprise­s are in the process of a major change brought about by digitaliza­tion. Xu said executives need to change their mindset and promote innovation to strengthen their business capabiliti­es.

Kingdee is committed to helping enterprise­s make digital transforma­tion and upgrade by providing an open platform ecosystem, Xu said.

The company’s Kingdee Cloud Cosmic, a platform which focuses on providing cloud services to large enterprise­s, has been offering over 20 types of cloud services and more than 100 enterprise-based applicatio­ns since its launch in 2018.

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