Alibaba (BABA) is signaling progress in its artificial intelligence ambitions, as hints emerge of a forthcoming enterprise AI agent built on its Qwen model. People familiar with the matter say the company could announce the new service as soon as this week.
The news has contributed to a modest uptick in Alibaba shares, reflecting growing investor anticipation of the company’s AI-driven enterprise solutions.
Alibaba Group Holding Limited, BABA
The tool is being developed by the team behind DingTalk, Alibaba’s workplace collaboration platform. The enterprise agent is expected to operate computers and handle tasks such as document summaries, business trip bookings, and other administrative workflows. Security features are reportedly built in to safeguard sensitive corporate data, a crucial factor for adoption in the enterprise sector.
Alibaba’s enterprise AI offering draws on systems already proven at scale in its consumer products. The Qwen App has been deployed for functions like food ordering through Taobao Instant Commerce and travel bookings on Fliggy, reaching over 100 million monthly active users in just two months.
The DingTalk team has also rolled out a Tongyi Qianwen-powered AI agent to 700 million users for work-related tasks on third-party platforms. Analysts note that leveraging these existing consumer technologies gives Alibaba a foundation for enterprise adoption, though commercialization and long-term revenue impact remain untested.
The enterprise AI launch comes at a time when Alibaba faces pressure both in terms of pricing and competition. The company has cut AI model prices by as much as 97%, positioning its offerings as far more affordable than U.S. counterparts, which can be up to 50 times more expensive. This pricing strategy favors broad adoption and ecosystem growth rather than immediate profit margins.
Alibaba CEO Eddie Wu pledged more than US$53 billion in AI investments last year, underscoring the company’s commitment to artificial general intelligence (AGI) as a strategic goal. Despite strong AI growth in China, Alibaba’s estimated $1 billion AI revenue run-rate remains significantly below U.S. rivals such as Microsoft Azure, highlighting the opportunity for enterprise-focused solutions.
Investors appear cautiously optimistic as Alibaba navigates the enterprise AI landscape. By integrating Qwen-based capabilities into corporate workflows, Alibaba aims to address the revenue gap relative to U.S. competitors while scaling its technology across China’s enterprise software market.
Analysts caution, however, that early integration coverage and pricing details remain undisclosed. Progress in enterprise AI adoption will likely take time, and returns may initially be modest. Still, the move reflects Alibaba’s broader AI ambitions and positions the company for long-term relevance in both consumer and corporate AI markets.
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