What are marketing, operations, finance, and human resource of Alibaba Group: The Rise of a Platform Giant based on efficiency?
Transcribed Image Text: Alibaba Group: The Rise of a Platform Giant
Alibaba, a company founded in 1999 to facilitate export transactions for small Chinese
businesses, grew to become a platform ecosystem with astonishing reach. Many
described Alibaba as being Amazon, Yelp, YouTube, and PayPal wrapped into one
company. When the company went public in 2014 (its stock symbol is BABA), it raised
US$25 billion, making it the largest IPO in history. For the fiscal year ending in March
2018, Alibaba posted revenues of over CNY 250 billion, or $US 36 billion, and in August
2018 it had a market cap of over $470 billion, making it the seventh highest valued
company in the world. In terms of gross merchandise volume moved, Alibaba was larger
financiers, logistics providers, information technology providers, and more. As put by Ming
Zeng, chairman of the Academic Council of Alibaba Group, "Alibaba does what Amazon,
eBay, PayPal, Google, FedEx, wholesalers, and a good portion of manufacturers do in
the United States, with a healthy helping of financial services for garnish." Alibaba did not
charge transaction fees or fees to list goods; instead, its business model relied on selling
advertising. The free listing service attracted sellers in droves, and by 2001 it already had
450,000 users and had achieved profitability.
Expanding Alibaba's Market Reach
In 2002, eBay entered the Chinese market by purchasing a large stake in EachNet, a
Chinese consumer-to consumer sales platform, and Ma sensed the threat eBay and
EachNet posed. Much of Alibaba's business came from small firms that could just as
easily use a consumer-oriented platform like EachNet, and if EachNet grew quickly, it
might lure Alibaba users away. Furthermore, individual consumers were already placing
orders on Alibaba when they wanted to buy goods in bulk, revealing the potential for a
consumer market for Alibaba. Thus, in 2003, Alibaba created a subsidiary platform called
than Amazon, Wal-Mart, and eBay combined.
The History of Alibaba
Alibaba was founded in 1999 by 18 friends led by Jack Ma. Ma's story is an inspiring,
rags-to-riches tale. He was born in Hangzhou, China, in 1964 to a poor family. He was
slight in build, and often got into fights with classmates. Ma struggled both to get into
university and to find a job. As he told Charlie Rose in an interview in 2015:
Taobao ("treasure hunt"), focused on consumer-to-consumer sales. Unlike eBay, Taobao
did not charge fees, and because Chinese users were more comfortable with face-to-face
transactions, it created Taobao WangWang, an instant messaging service that simulated
face-to-face negotiations between buyers and sellers. The strategy was successful-by
2004, Alibaba controlled most of the consumer-to-consumer ecommerce market in China,
and eBay announced its exit from the company. In 2004, Alibaba partnered with four of
China's largest banks to create an e-payment system called Alipay. Though initially Alipay
was designed just to work with Taobao and Tmall, soon the payment system evolved to
be a complete mobile-payment service. Using a smartphone, Alipay users can make
payments online and at bricks-and-mortar stores. They can also use it to make person-
to-person money transfers, purchase bus and train tickets, hail taxis, and as digital
identification for many public services. The company grew rapidly. By 2008, Alibaba's
annual revenues were 3.9 billion yuan (or $US 562 million). Unfortunately, the free and
open nature of Taobao was both a strength and a weakness. While sellers of any size
could join easily, Taobao also began to have a reputation for having counterfeit products.
To counter this, Alibaba launched a business-to consumer retail platform, Taobao Mall,
later referred to simply as Tmall. Unlike Taobao, TMall screened sellers, and set
standards for quality and reliability. It also collected annual fees and transaction fees from
sellers. The combination of standards and fees effectively limited sellers to larger, more
established players. This, in turn, gave consumers more confidence in the products and
transaction process.
“There's an examination for young people to go to university. I failed it three times.
I failed a lot. So I applied to 30 different jobs and got rejected. I went for a job with the
police; they said, "You're no good." I even went to KFC when it came to my city. Twenty
four people went for the job. Twenty-three were accepted. I was the only guy [who
wasn't)."
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Ma was also rejected by Harvard ten times. He ultimately accepted a job as an English
teacher that paid $12 month. In 1995, Ma traveled to the United States for the first time,
serving as an interpreter for a Chinese government trade delegation. There, on a lark, he
did an online search for "beer" and "China." and was surprised to find that no Chinese
beers came up. He decided at that moment to form a company called China Pages, which
would help Chinese companies build websites. China Pages would eventually merge into
an unsuccessful joint venture with China Telecom. Ma next headed up an Internet
company backed by the Chinese Ministry of Foreign Trade and Economic Cooperation in
Beijing. Ma worried, however, that being connected to the government would keep him
from capitalizing on the rapid change and opportunities created by the Internet. Ma thus
persuaded his team at the ministry to return to Hangzhou with him. There they founded
were
lounded
Alibaba. The company began as a business-to-business wholesale platform that enabled
companies around the world to easily buy products from China. The platform was
particularly useful for small to medium sized Chinese businesses that would normally not
be able to easily tap the export market. Ma had the objective of democratizing business
in China by helping small businesses overcome the advantages large businesses
wielded. As he noted, "What we do is give small companies e-commerce ability by helping
them source partners and information around the world." Unlike Amazon, Alibaba would
not take ownership over inventory; instead it would provide access to all the resources
that an online business would need to succeed. It would serve as a platform hub at the
center of an ecosystem of interacting partners of all types: suppliers, buyers, advertisers,
Deepening the Platform Strategy
Transaction volume grew quickly, and the firm turned its focus from growing its user base
to improving the efficiency of its logistics, finance, and data infrastructure, and providing
additional services to members of its ecosystem (see Figure 1). In 2011, the company
spent over US $4 billion on logistics and an integrated network of warehouses across
Transcribed Image Text: China, and in 2013, Alibaba and a consortium of logistics companies formed Cainiao, a
logistics network that links warehouses, distribution centers and delivery companies.
Mirroring Alibaba's strategy for e-commerce, Cainiao owns no warehouses and employs
no delivery personnel; instead, it just coordinates them efficiently, enabling participants
to confidentially exchange information, provide real-time status on deliveries, and more.
late 2017, Cainiao was coordinating over 57 million deliveries a day. Alibaba also
engines that yield increasingly precise predictions about things like consumer
preferences, inventory needs, and investment returns. In the same way that each Google
search makes the Google search engine more accurate at gauging what a user is looking
for, each transaction in Alibaba's rapidly growing ecosystem makes its platform smarter.
In systems based on data and networks, size matters; the volume of data input into the
system can create a self-reinforcing advantage. This raised important questions about
the future of companies like Alibaba, Amazon, Tencent, and Google. Would these
markets tend to become natural monopolies? Would they hold dangerous amounts of
power over consumers? And would they ultimately try to unseat each other? Though
these companies have largely avoided direct competition by dominating different parts of
the world, each is becoming increasingly global. Analysts also noted that, although
Alibaba's sales were only about one-fifth of Amazon's in 2017, Alibaba was far more
profitable than Amazon, with Alibaba earning $9.7 billion in net income, over three times
Amazon's $US 3 billion (see Figure 3 and financial statements in Exhibits 1 and 2). The
financial ratios told a powerful story about Alibaba's strategy of owning the platform but
not the products: Alibaba was significantly more profitable, and it enjoyed much higher
returns on invested capital.
By
started two microfinance subsidiaries that would provide microloans to small sellers on
Taobao and Alibaba.com. At banks in China, the minimum loan amount was typically
about 6 million RMB (about $1 million), which was well above the needs of a typical small
business. Furthermore, most small businesses lacked the credit history and
documentation of their business performance needed to apply for such loans. This meant
that tens of millions of small businesses in China were struggling to gain access to the
capital they needed to grow their businesses. Alibaba realized it already had real-time
accurate data on the performance of millions of small businesses on its platform, and it
could use that data to create a credit assessment program. Alibaba was able to not only
provide microloans to businesses, but also performed all steps of its loan process online,
making it fast and convenient. In the seven years since launching its microloan programs,
now merged under the name Ant Financial Services, Alibaba has loaned more than 87
billion RMB ($13.4 billion) to nearly three million small and medium-sized enterprises,
with an average loan size of 8,000 RMB (about $1,200). As described by Ming Zeng: Ant
can easily process loans as small as several hundred RMB (around $50) in a few minutes.
THE FUTURE
Alibaba's early growth had been primarily driven by the enormous underserved population
of Chinese consumers and small businesses, but in 2017 Jack Ma made it clear that it
was time for Alibaba to have a bigger presence in the United States and Europe. While
many pressed Ma to use Taobao and Tmall to sell to U.S. consumers, Ma demonstrated
his political savvy by turning the equation around and focusing on helping U.S.
businesses reach the Chinese market. In a meeting with U.S. President Donald Trump in
2017, Ma promised to sign up one million U.S. small businesses to Taobao and Tmall to
sell to Chinese consumers over the next five years and predicted that each small business
would likely hire at least one new employee as a result of increased sales, hence
providing one million new jobs in the United States. Trump was delighted by the promise,
and declared to a roomful of press, "Jack and I are going to do some great things."13
However, on September 10, 2018, Jack Ma's 54th birthday, he stunned the world by
announcing that he would be retiring as Alibaba's chairman in exactly one year. Ma was
now China's richest man, with a net worth of $40 billion, and was determined to now focus
his efforts on education and philanthropy. As he wrote in his letter to customers,
employees and shareholders,
"I still have lots of dreams to pursue. Those who know me know that I do not like
to sit idle. I plan on continuing my role as the founding partner in the Alibaba Partnership
and contribute to the work of the partnership. I also want to return to education, which
excites me with so much blessing because this is what I love to do. The world is big, and
I am still young, so I want to try new things- because what if new dreams can be
Can
How is this possible? When faced with potential borrowers, lending institutions need
answer only three basic questions: Should we lend to them, how much should we lend,
and at what interest rate? Once sellers on our platforms gave us authorization to analyze
their data, we were well positioned to answer those questions. Our algorithms can look
at transaction data to assess how well a business is doing, how competitive its offerings
are in the market, whether its partners have high credit ratings, and so on. Alipay was
brought under the umbrella of the Ant Financial Services group, and by 2018, Alipay had
grown to become the second-largest mobile payment system in the world, with roughly
500 million users in 2018, second to Chinese rival Tencent's WeChat Pay (see Figure 2)
In 2016, Alibaba introduced an Al-powered chatbot, Ali Xiaomi ("Ali Assistant") that can
handle both spoken and written customer queries on Taobao and TmallI. Ali Xiaomi can
handle a wide range of customer requests, including product returns, making product
suggestions, and answering questions about delivery status. The chatbot uses machine
learning to continuously improve its ability to diagnose and fix customer issues, enabling
it to handle increasingly complex problems over time. Automating customer service
improves the efficiency of both Alibaba and its merchants. As noted by Ming Zeng,
"Previously, most large sellers on our platform would hire temp workers to handle
consume
consumer inquiries during big events. Not anymore. During Alibaba's biggest sales day
in 2017, the chatbot handled more than 95% of customer questions, responding to some
3.5
i million consumers." Alibaba also created a spinoff company, Aliyun that offered cloud-
based services to Chinese ecommerce vendors, banks, game developers, and others.
Aliyun developed its own cloud-based smartphone operating system, Aliyun OS, which
enabled sellers to manage their online storefronts using a smartphone. The cornerstone
of Alibaba's advantage was data. All transactions handled by Alibaba, Taobao, Tmall,
Alipay, Cainiao, and Aliyun generate data, and that data, in turn, is fed into algorithmic
realized?!
hich
The one thing I can promise everyone is this: Alibaba was never about Jack Ma, but Jack
Ma will forever belong to Alibaba.