China Daily

Alibaba to give small stores tech boost

Millions of unchained mom-and-pop shops will be included into LST system

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

E-commerce titan Alibaba Group Holding Ltd aims to deepen its omni-channel deployment by transformi­ng millions of mom-and-pop stores in China via a databacked retailer management system.

By encouragin­g merchants to link into the LST app, the online shopping emporium hopes to unlock the consumptio­n potential of shoppers from second-tier cities to even lower-tier townships and villages by enhancing the merchants’ capabiliti­es in marketing, delivery and inventory management.

The goal to include 1 million unchained stores into the LST system in one year is the latest instance of Alibaba’s New Retail strategy, which features customized manufactur­ing, seamless online-to-offline shopping, and precise demand-prediction based on big data and algorithms, Alibaba CEO Daniel Zhang said on Monday in Hangzhou.

China has nearly six million retailers ranging from street stands and kiosks peddling soft drinks and snacks to street corner stores selling groceries, most of which have less financial leeway and limited negotiatin­g power, said Lin Xiaohai, Alibaba vice-president and general manager of Alibaba Distributi­on Platform.

To address that, partner shops can bank on Tmall’s procuremen­t strength to secure previously unattainab­le products from brands directly and at competitiv­e prices, said Lin, a fast-moving consumer goods veteran who spent two decades at retail giant P&G Co before joining Alibaba last year.

Furthermor­e, an inventory monitoring system is in operation to give real-time advice on product display and portfolio adjustment. This is coupled with a three-layer warehouse system covering 200 cities and townships to ensure the timely delivery of products, based on geographic­al shopping preference­s that are logged in Alibaba’s data book.

“Our goal is to digitalize all grocery stores by shortening their procuremen­t cycle and doubling gross merchandis­e volume in a year,” Lin said, adding that LST wants to grab onethird of all sourcing channels for small businesses by 2020.

“We are very excited about the LST business … because it helps enhance transparen­cy, profession­alism and efficiency in the industry,” said Andrew Kennedy, vice-president of customer developmen­t at Unilever China, an Alibaba partner, on the data-driven distributi­on model.

Alibaba tested the service a year ago by inviting a select number of merchants to try out the service. Benefiting from a clear depiction and analysis of nearby demographi­cs, half a million participat­ing shops saw their gross merchandis­e volume skyrocket 28 times year-on-year in July, according to company data.

Fang Wei, owner of a 150squre-meter foodstuffs store in Huangshan, Anhui province, said the connection to LST helped to boost sales “significan­tly”, without disclosing sales figures. He looked forward to better leveraging the platform’s other functions, such as the procuremen­t-on-credit service.

The LST service helps Alibaba fill the void of connecting smaller-scale business entities, after the internet giant tapped into high-end shopping chains like Intime Retail Group Co Ltd and Bailian (Group) Co Ltd.

Alibaba also plans to revamp 10,000 LST shops into Tmall Co-branded stores this year, which features a deeper level of cooperatio­n from sourcing to use of data.

 ?? PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? Lin Xiaohai, Alibaba’s vice-president and general manager of Alibaba Distributi­on Platform, at a news conference in Hangzhou, Zhejiang province, on Monday.
PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY Lin Xiaohai, Alibaba’s vice-president and general manager of Alibaba Distributi­on Platform, at a news conference in Hangzhou, Zhejiang province, on Monday.

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