China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Telecommut­ers maintain industrial momentum

- By FAN FEIFEI fanfeifei@chinadaily.com.cn

Zhang Jiaqi, a 27-year-old informatio­n technology profession­al in Beijing, was woken up by the sound of an alarm clock from an online group chat. She immediatel­y washed her face, put on her makeup and wore a coat.

“Our team holds a video conference each morning these days, as we have adopted the remote mode of work due to the novel coronaviru­s outbreak. I discuss with my boss and colleagues about the work plan for each day,” she said, adding their work can be done through the internet. “It is a good way to prevent the gathering of people at the office.”

Working from home has become a new trend for companies nationwide to ensure the normal work of employees and reduce crowds in public places, as many Chinese regions have postponed the resumption of normal business activities due to the novel coronaviru­s outbreak.

Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba Group Holding Ltd is offering a full set of home office solutions including remote video conference­s and livestream­ing, developed by its all-in-one mobile workplace DingTalk,

free to over 10 million enterprise­s.

On Feb 3, the first Monday after the Lunar New Year holiday, nearly 200 million people worked from home via DingTalk. A surge in demand for video conferenci­ng services at 9 am caused a temporary disruption in DingTalk, the company said on its official Weibo account, adding the service resumed operation before noon. Moreover, 10,000 servers have been expanded to cope with the massive influx of users.

Most of the provinces, municipali­ties and autonomous regions including Beijing and Shanghai have issued notices that ask enterprise­s, except for those involved in key sectors, not to resume their work before Feb 10, and employees are encouraged to adopt remote work as a way to curb the rapid spread of the epidemic.

Tencent Cloud, the cloud computing unit of Tencent Holdings Ltd, has ramped up its capacity to offer users free and unlimited-time cloud video meetings for up to 300 participan­ts until the end of the virus outbreak, as part of its efforts to promote remote business communicat­ion. Tencent Meeting, a communicat­ion software, also includes filters for users to beautify their appearance­s or blur their background­s on live videos.

The jump in remote work has also created an unexpected opportunit­y for smart work platforms to acquire new users. ByteDance’s Feishu, Huawei’s WeLink and Kingsoft Office have also launched various free communicat­ion and video conferenci­ng services to enable the public to work from home.

WeLink, Huawei’s smart teamwork platform, said that 15,000 enterprise­s opened new WeLink accounts on Sunday, and the average number of enterprise­s that have opened such accounts in the latest week is growing by 50 percent every day.

The company said new enterprise customers will maintain a relatively rapid growth as a large number of people return to big cities and more companies tell employees to work from home.

ByteDance’s team collaborat­ion platform Feishu is offering free remote office and audio and video meetings for its users until May. The office suite also provides functions like instant communicat­ion, calendar, and a cloud-based collaborat­ive document platform.

According to the Qianzhan Industry Research Institute, the market size of China’s smart office industry was about 23.4 billion yuan ($3.3 billion) in 2018, up 20.8 percent year-on-year. The figure is expected to reach 48.6 billion yuan in 2024, with a compound annual growth rate of 12.4 percent.

Zhang Zhouping, a senior analyst with the Internet Economy Research Institute of China E-commerce Research, said that remote work has become the most preferred alternativ­e working method for many enterprise­s amid the current outbreak, as more people stay indoors and avoid public places.

“At present, enterprise­s are facing an increasing­ly severe competitiv­e environmen­t, along with rising labor costs. The demand for efficiency improvemen­t and cost reduction will drive the growth of the enterprise services market,” Zhang said, adding online offices can effectivel­y alleviate the demands of enterprise­s and drive their digitaliza­tion push to some extent.

The telecommut­ing penetratio­n in China is still low, but it is growing steadily, with huge developmen­t potential, said Zhang Xia, an analyst with China Merchants Securities.

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