Alibaba Group
Alibaba Group
Alibaba’s culture values meritocracy over hierarchy, “outside the box” innovation the
spirit of embracing change, optimism, and idealism. The company commits to maintain
a kind and respectful environment so that everyone at Alibaba feels like a family
member.
The company’s values are fundamental to the way we operate and how it recruits,
evaluates and compensates its people. The values that the company always lives are:
In appraisals, Alibaba’s employees are rated our six core values in addition to business
performance, and these value-based ratings will affect employee compensation and
promotion decisions.
“We talk a lot at Alibaba about maintaining a culture of humility, openness, and equality. The
company has lots of influence on the economy and business in China, and extending into the
world. But that’s a privilege and a responsibility. So we keep a very close watch on culture here-
we even rank employees in their performance appraisals on how well they fulfil our values of
customer first, teamwork, embracing change, integrity, passion and, commitment.
Alibaba operates a transparent and inclusive work environment. The company believes
diversity is fundamental to maintaining its ability to innovate. Gender diversity is deep-
rooted in the history of Alibaba and the company owes its success to having strong and
effective female leaders. When Alibaba was founded in 1999, one-third of its 18
founders were women. Today, 12 of the 36 partners in the Alibaba Partnership are
women, and they take on senior management positions at Alibaba Group and its
affiliates. Within the company’s organization, women play prominent leadership roles in,
among other things, engineering, product, customer service, risk management, human
resources and financial management. As a company founded in China looking to grow
globally, it recruits talent in local markets as well as special programs to develop young
international professionals who can eventually play leadership roles in its organization.
Alibaba Global Talent Development is a program where the company recruits
approximately 30 professionals from around the world annually to come to its
Headquarters in Hangzhou for a two-year period. The program offers rotational training
in its business units in six-month segments as well as classroom and language
instruction and, upon graduation from the program, the employee is eligible for a
permanent position in one of its business units in China or overseas. Alibaba is a global
company and a meritocracy above all else. It does not discriminate on the basis of race,
gender, religion or sexual orientation.
TRAINING
At the end of 2017, Alibaba conducted over 2,500 training sessions on 4,000 topics for
tens of thousands of its employees across Alibaba. Examples include sessions on
Alibaba culture, people management, strategic thinking, product knowledge, data
handling, and international business development.
What are the different training methods Alibaba to train their employees?
Alibaba Group in May hung out an international “help wanted” sign with the
announcement of a global recruitment and training program called the Alibaba Global
Leadership Academy (AGLA).This week the first batch of 32 young professionals
arrived at the e-commerce giant’s corporate campus in Hangzhou, China, to begin a
year of cultural immersion, leadership training, and on-the-job experience that includes
work at various Alibaba business units.
The official start of AGLA might seem less than newsworthy considering the scale and
scope of Alibaba’s businesses—the company has more than 46,000 employees. But the
program is a reminder of Alibaba’s ambitious plans to expand its operations
internationally, which executives say cannot be accomplished without significant
changes to its overwhelmingly Chinese workforce.
“The world is more connected than ever before. People who can work across cultures
and languages represent the future,” said Jack Ma, Alibaba Executive Chairman. “We
know that for Alibaba to have a meaningful global impact, we have to be able to
understand other cultures, respect other cultures and appreciate other cultures. The
AGLA is one way we are building that trust and mutual understanding.”
Selected from 3,000 applicants, the inaugural class of 2016 is certainly diverse.
Program participants hail from 14 countries as well as from top universities such as
Harvard, Yale, Wharton, Oxford, Cambridge and the Indian Institute of Technology.
Alibaba said it screened candidates based on learning ability, strategic and innovative
thinking, and cultural fit for the company, among other factors. Being able to speak
Chinese was not essential. Half the class have no Mandarin skills.
Brian Wong, an Alibaba vice president and AGLA executive director, said the program
was “designed to provide a grounding in the cultural and industry context of Alibaba to
enable our future global leaders to effectively collaborate in China and across borders.
At the same time, we intend to strengthen our headquarters’ global capabilities through
the interactions and contributions of our AGLA participants in China.” He added the
program will help “build a strong foundation for our future international footprint.”
Alizia Staff 2016 Oct 24, Alibaba’s Global Talent Training Program Gets Underway,
Alibaba <https://www.alizila.com/alibabas-global-talent-training-program-gets-
underway/>
Making you prepared to work with the best cloud providers of the globe, there is a wide
selection of Alibaba training program available. These training programs include both
fundamental basics and advanced learning materials. Whether you are a beginner or a
pro, the Alibaba training programs and certifications are very crucial.
The training programs will provide significant knowledge about the built of software
intelligence in the cloud. To make your way smoothly around the big data, Alibaba
training program will teach you the ways. Delivering an easier way for adopting Alibaba
cloud technology, the programs will boost your capability and activate your applicability.
Alibaba Training Program
In total, there are three levels of training programs available in Alibaba. Those
training programs include Alibaba Cloud Associate, ACP or Alibaba Cloud
Professional and ACE or Alibaba cloud expert. As the name suggests, the
Alibaba cloud associate suits perfectly the requirement of a beginner and Alibaba
cloud professional will make you an intermediate level expert in Alibaba cloud
computing. Yet, to become an expert and master all of the cornerstones of cloud
computing, you need to partake the ACE or Alibaba cloud expert course.
To boost up the performance and enhance your capability, Alibaba training
program also includes Alibaba cloud technical essentials, Alibaba cloud technical
operations, Alibaba cloud big data essentials and Alibaba cloud security
solutions. To get better knowledge about the cloud computing, elastic computing,
RDS, server load balance as well as object storage services, Alibaba Cloud
Technical essentials can help.
To improvise the management skills for working with Alibaba Cloud products, the
developers, technical operators and engineers need to master a certain level of
knowledge and Alibaba Cloud Technical operations could help to achieve that.
Alibaba cloud big data essentials make your knowledgeable about the
organization, analysis and interpretation of big data. This particular task is highly
important for defining data strategy to leverage the big data.
This particular Alibaba training program will help to understand the prioritization
of the data technologies for ensuring growth and driving the businesses forward.
In this particular training program, MaxCompute, HybridDB, DataIDE and other
linked services will be taught, which can certainly prove to be handy for
applications and solutions. Furthermore, there is a training program specifically
designed for the cloud security and it will allow to develop a significant insight
about the cloud security and Alibaba offerings.
Regional Training Programs
Alibaba also offers Apsara clouder technical certificates to boost up your professional
skills online. It offers cloud computing, cloud security and big data management
solutions. With handful of regional operating centers, Alibaba launched a new data
center in India as well. They are now providing Alibaba certified training programs in
India. The highly qualified cloud gurus of Alibaba will potentiate your skills and nurture
your cloud computing knowledge.
Both basic and advanced level courses are offered by these courses. Furthermore, a
wide array of tips and tricks to analyze and solve the problems with supreme efficacy
will be taught. At the same time, it allows the learners to know about cloud strategy for
betterment of businesses on a wide variety of verticals.
Elaborating the Alibaba Training Program, Strengthscapehttps://strengthscape.com/elaborating-
alibaba-training-program/
On January 23rd, 2020, Alibaba CEO Daniel Jiang, Executive Chairman of Ant
Financial Eric Jing, Secretary General Guo Jing and Alibaba Group Chief People Officer
(Head of HR) Judy Tong set up an emergency working group to leverage Alibaba’s
ecosystem to overcome the crisis and align people’s strategy within 4 focus areas:
Here some initiatives from Alibaba HR’s strategy and examples of concrete actions put
in place with a very clear framework to support people during the crisis.
COMMUNICATION
From the beginning of the crisis, the HR team worked hands in hands with the
communication team to start a video program called « Daily news in the battle ». The
idea was to open a new communication channel in the organization that will broadcast
information and updates in real time to show how Alibaba's employees came together to
fight the battle. From a global initiative they delegate to every business units the
responsibility to create their own daily news reports and spread the news among each
department. In this kind of situation what is interesting to notice is how HR team couldn't
go alone on this project but needed the support of communication department and
effective cross-department collaboration was a key to succeed in this 1st C.
CONNECTING
COMMITMENT
When such crisis happened, the main question for Alibaba and probably many
companies was « How do we keep inspiring people to keep performing well
during such difficult time? ». As an inspiring leader, Jack Ma created a powerful
video message to HR teams « Only those who can face challenges and
enterprises who can overcome difficulties will have a bright future ». By inspiring
HR teams they could then spread this energy to the rest of employees of the
organization.
Alibaba’s HR strategy ensure during the crisis a smooth execution of all those initiatives
in the different business units of the group. This strategy succeeds to keep employees
focused and thrive better. HR in Alibaba group has deep business sense so that their
strategy could be aligned on business objectives. The outcome of such successful HR
strategy is tremendous:
Albin Warin 2020 April 29, Alibaba’s Winning HR Strategy during the Crisis, Linkedin
<https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/alibabas-winning-hr-strategy-during-crisis-albin-warin-
%E7%8E%8B%E4%B9%90%E5%BF%83/>
Alibaba is not a retailer in the traditional sense. It doesn’t source or keep stock, and
logistics services are carried out by third-party providers. Instead, Alibaba is what you
get if you take all the functions associated with retail and coordinate them online into a
sprawling, data-driven network of sellers, marketers, service providers, logistics
companies, and manufacturers. Indeed, Alibaba does what Amazon, eBay, PayPal,
Google, FedEx, all of the wholesalers, and a good portion of manufacturers in the U.S.
do, with a healthy helping of financial services for garnish.
Alibaba achieves this by leveraging the new technologies of network coordination and
data intelligence. It harnesses the efforts of thousands of Chinese businesses to create
an ecosystem that is faster, smarter, and more efficient than traditional business
infrastructures.
This is an emerging business model that Ming Zeng, the chair of Alibaba’s Academic
Council, calls smart business. Players in the ecosystem share data and apply machine-
learning technology to identify and better fulfill consumer needs. This article provides a
framework for transforming a company into a smart business.
Smart business emerges when all players involved in achieving a common business
goal—retailing, for example, or ride sharing—are coordinated in an online network and
use machine-learning technology to efficiently leverage data in real time. This tech-
enabled model, in which most operational decisions are made by machines, allows
companies to adapt dynamically and rapidly to changing market conditions and
customer preferences, gaining tremendous competitive advantage over traditional
businesses.
To become a smart business, your firm must enable as many operating decisions as
possible to be made by machines fueled by live data rather than by humans supported
by their own data analysis. Transforming decision making in this way is a four-step
process.
Ant was fortunate to have access to plenty of data on potential borrowers to answer the
questions inherent in its lending business. For many businesses, the data capture
process will be more challenging. But live data is essential to creating the feedback
loops that are the basis of machine learning.
Most businesses that seek to be more data-driven typically collect and analyze
information in order to create a causal model. The model then isolates the critical data
points from the mass of information available. That is not how smart businesses use
data. Instead, they capture all information generated during exchanges and
communications with customers and other network members as the business operates
and then let the algorithms figure out what data is relevant.
Once a business has all its operations online, it will experience a deluge of data. To
assimilate, interpret, and use the data to its advantage, the firm must create models and
algorithms that make explicit the underlying product logic or market dynamics that the
business is trying to optimize. This is a huge creative undertaking that requires many
new skills, hence the enormous demand for data scientists and economists. Their
challenge is to specify what job they want the machine to do, and they have to be very
clear about what constitutes a job well done in a particular business setting.
Digital-native companies such as Alibaba have the advantage of being born online and
data-ready, so their transformation to smart business is quite natural. Now that they
have proven the model works and are transforming the old industrial economy, it is time
for all companies to understand and apply this new business logic. That may look
technologically intimidating, but it is becoming more and more feasible. The
commercialization of cloud computing and artificial intelligence technologies has made
large-scale computational power and analytic capabilities accessible to anyone. Indeed,
the cost of storing and computing large quantities of data has dropped dramatically over
the past decade. This means that real-time applications of machine learning are now
possible and affordable in more and more environments. The rapid development of
internet-of-things technology will further digitize our physical surroundings, providing
ever more data. As these innovations accumulate in the coming decades, the winners
will be companies that get smart faster than the competition.
Ming Zeng 2018, Alibaba and the Future of Business, Harvard Business Review
<https://hbr.org/2018/09/alibaba-and-the-future-of-business>
Alibaba: China is a Huge Challenge and a Huge Opportunity
When J. Michael Evans tells a filled auditorium at the National Retail Federation’s
annual trade show that patience is one of the key requirements for retailers expanding
into China, you might want to listen.
See, he’s worked in retail in China for decades and he’s a top executive at a company
that appears to have a pretty good handle on the Chinese market — Alibaba. The
gigantic China-based marketplace has 600 million regular customers and hosts more
than 200,000 businesses and brands, including about thousands that are based in the
United States.
“It isn’t as simple as showing up in China with a product and saying, ‘There are 600
million people on Alibaba’s platform. Surely somebody must be interested,” Evans,
president of the Alibaba Group, said during an interview with Ian McGarrigle, chairman
of the World Retail Congress.
“Building your brand and building your consumer base and building that consumer
relationship in China takes time,” he continued. “If you’re impatient; if you’re in a hurry; if
you view this as something that you’re hoping will impact your quarterly results, this
year and maybe next year; then it’s not the market for you.”
And when you listen to Evans, it’s clear the growth in those numbers in coming years
will be staggering. He pointed out that China’s middle class has swelled to 300 million
people. Within five years, he said, it will be 600 million.
They key for those expanding into China, of course, is understanding those consumers.
“The Chinese consumer is very young,” Evans said. ” The Chinese consumer is very
curious and very interested in new products and new ideas, creative things that are
coming from other parts of the world.”
In some ways, Chinese consumers have taken commerce trends that exist in other
parts of the world and super-sized them. Mobile is not only king, it is practically
everything. Mobile payments are huge.
“That consumer base — young, mobile, affluent — is also very story oriented,” Evans
explained. “They actually do quite a lot of work to understand what a brand or what a
(small or medium business) or what a retailers is selling, where the products come from,
and why they will fit their lifestyle today and in the future.”
But Alibaba — and the sellers on the marketplace — appear to have cracked the code,
for now. Consider those 600 million consumers. They buy stuff — a lot of stuff. Evans
said Alibaba has $780 million in sales. It delivers 70 million packages a day. On Singles
Day, the platform saw $31 billion in sales and delivered over 1 billion orders.
Impressive numbers — and potentially scary for retailers who are not Alibaba. Evans
did not address competitive fears directly, though he objected to being described as the
Amazon of China, pointing out the platform is a marketplace that shares customer data
with its merchants.
Of course, China, as a market, isn’t going anywhere, despite the current economic
slowdown in the China. The short-term is volatile, Evans said. But think of the long term.
“Long term, 10 years from now, that economy will probably be the largest economy in
the world,” he said. “Consumption, as part of total GDP, will be the largest piece.”
“It will not be a market that most small businesses, brands and retailers can afford to
ignore.”
Mike Cassidy 2019 Jan 24, Alibaba: China is a Huge Challenge and a Huge
Opportunity, Signifyd < https://www.signifyd.com/blog/alibaba-challenge-opportunity/>
"Alibaba's main values are to better serve customers and help customers solve
problems. In this process, employees must constantly seek some innovative ideas and
methods to solve problems."
Alibaba promotes employees' innovative behavior from their daily work, at the same
time, employees are encouraged to speak up their own ideas, which lays a further
foundation for Alibaba's innovation. The interviewee 2 concurred with this view, by
stating that:
“Alibaba encourages employees to be brave to break the class restrictions within the
company. Employees can cross the leadership of their own departments to
communicate with the company's top management and share their ideas boldly. I think
this is why Alibaba can have a steady stream of new ideas.”