China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Alibaba vows more help for innovators

- By ZHENG XIN zhengxin@chinadaily.com.cn

Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba Group vowed to enable more entreprene­urs in Africa who have ideas and practical knowledge gained from China’s innovative businesses to accelerate the developmen­t of e-commerce platforms on the continent.

Empowering entreprene­urs from Africa is in line with the company’s commitment to support entreprene­urs from Africa and help them to succeed in the digital world, said Song Juntao, vicepresid­ent of Alibaba Global Business Group.

The sharing of technologi­es and access to insights and experience will help cultivate more African talent and young entreprene­urs, which in turn will benefit the company’s long-term developmen­t in African countries, he said.

Jessica Wang, North China business director of Hays, a global specialist recruitmen­t agency, noted that e-commerce in China has grown rapidly, and Chinese companies are expanding continuall­y with innovative and largescale projects that can impact the industry.

Companies like Alibaba have become global names, Wang said.

The company has been holding intensive training sessions for African entreprene­urs on e-commerce innovation­s in recent years — for example, its Global E-commerce Talent program for university teachers, which was launched by the company’s business school in Rwanda last month. It was the first time the program had been offered in Africa.

As part of the company’s commitment to support education and e-commerce on the continent, the program aims to deepen the understand­ing of the e-commerce industry among Rwandan university teachers and to train individual­s to compete in the digital economy. To date, 52 African entreprene­urs from 14 African countries have participat­ed in the fellowship.

The company has also launched a new initiative — the Netpreneur Prize — for African entreprene­urs in South Africa. It aims to build a community of 100 young African entreprene­urs by 2030 who will receive grants totaling $10 million.

AliExpress is currently available to anyone with an internet connection in many African countries, while the company also facilitate­s African exports to China.

Since Alibaba entered the African market, more than 4.2 million African customers have purchased Chinese products through AliExpress.

In South Africa alone, some 100,000 residents purchased Chinese products through AliExpress in 2017, with the revenue witnessing year-onyear growth of 32 percent and order volume growing 48 percent.

Clothing, wigs, automobile­s, motorbikes, sports products, computers, mobile phones, jewelry and health products are among the top purchases, it said.

Tmall, an online shopping platform of Alibaba, now sees orders from countries including Morocco, Egypt, Algeria, Mauritius and South Africa, covering sectors including maternity and infant products, cosmetics, household items, hiking, home and textile products and healthcare products.

African drums, Moroccan hair conditione­r, black tea soap, football jerseys from Algeria and stuffed elephant toys have been well received by Chinese customers.

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