The Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba.com, which connects companies with manufacturers and wholesalers, is seeing a surge in transactions involving U.S. buyers and sellers as the coronavirus forces companies online.
The business-to-business platform saw a 100 percent year-over-year increase in the number of transactions involving U.S. buyers or sellers, according to John Caplan, president of Alibaba.com in North America and Europe.
"On a COVID-adjusted basis, Alibaba.com will do more transactional volume than Uber Rides or Airbnb lodging," Caplan told Cheddar.
The company chalks up the sudden uptick to shifting business trends amid the coronavirus pandemic. The role of trade shows in introducing companies to new suppliers and products is now being played by the online marketplace.
"You can't get on an airplane and go to a trade show anymore to find the newest, most innovative supplies," Caplan said.
Specific categories have powered the surge. Personal protective equipment and materials helped drive sales, as well as increased demand for home supplies and products.
"We've also seen remarkable growth in the work-from-home categories, things like office supplies for the home, education supplies for home, but also yoga wear, comfortable clothes, outdoor furniture," Caplan said. "Americans are becoming entrepreneurial from home, but they're also home-schooling and trying to stay fit and healthy."
Many small businesses that had not yet gone digital prior to the pandemic were forced to quickly adapt.
"We're seeing a generation of change," he said. "I think what would have taken a decade has happened in two months."
Corporate earnings season is underway, that time when companies share their billions in sales or double-digit profits. But the data shows even companies are struggling with high inflation and interest rates.
Boeing continues their terrifying trend of having their planes fall apart mid-flight, inflation — checks notes — is still up and the future of AI looks terrifying. Cheery!
Food waste – uneaten scraps or leftovers sent to landfills – is responsible for 10% of global emissions. Mill, a new product from the co-founder of Nest, thinks technology can play a role in eliminating it.
By the time the 2024 election is over, be prepared to see some form of a recession – but this shouldn’t be as bad as what we experienced in 2020 or 2008.
International Master Alice Lee defeated grandmaster Irina Krush to win the American Cup – becoming one of the best women players in the world in the process – but she’s not stopping there.
You can track your sleep habits or heart rate, but how about your brain? Neurable's MW75-Neuro headphones turn your focus and productivity into data you can use to avoid burnout – here's how they do it.
Whether it’s a deepfake video of actor Tom Cruise discovering gum in a lollipop or President Joe Biden discouraging people from voting via telephone, you’ve likely come across a deepfake video, photo or audio recording.