Advertisement
Hong Kong economy
Hong KongHong Kong Economy

Small firms in mainland China adopting AI more readily than large ones, experts say

Market agility, steady power supplies and data exchanges also key to gaining edge and dominating AI sector, tech leaders at Bali forum say

3-MIN READ3-MIN
Listen
(From left) SCMP senior correspondent Natalie Wong; Kenneth Gaw, managing principal of Gaw Capital Partners; Sean Glodek, vice-chairman of CT Bright Holdings; Lai Lipeng, co-founder and chief innovation officer of Xtalpi; Executive Council member Jeffrey Lam; and Steven Xiao, deputy head of enterprise business of China Mobile International. Photo: Nora Tam
Zhou Yuxiang (right), founder and CEO of Black Lake Technologies, and Edmund Lee, general manager of Gold Peak Technology, speaking at the Nusa Dua Forum in Bali on Friday. Photo: Nora Tam
(From left) SCMP Hong Kong news editor Denise Tsang; Anindya Novyan Bakrie, CEO of Bakrie & Brothers and chairman of Kadin Indonesia; Edmund Lee, general manager of Gold Peak Technology; and Zhou Yuxiang, founder and CEO of Black Lake Technologies. Photo: Nora Tam
Natalie Wongin Bali

Smaller, family-run businesses in mainland China are embracing advanced artificial intelligence (AI) more readily than large enterprises, while market agility and steady power supplies will determine the winners of the global AI race, industry leaders have said at a forum in Indonesia.

Panel speakers at the inaugural Nusa Dua Forum in Bali, organised on Friday by the South China Morning Post and Indonesian sovereign wealth fund Danantara Indonesia, discussed their views on the AI economy and the digital transformation of factories.

Zhou Yuxiang, founder and CEO of Shanghai-headquartered industrial software firm Black Lake Technologies, said during one panel discussion that his company had shifted its focus from serving large companies to small and medium-sized enterprises and family-owned or independent businesses in response to demand.

“It’s an interesting trend that I feel mom-and-pop shops are more open to agentic technology,” he said.

Black Lake Technologies, founded in 2016, develops cloud-based solutions to help factories digitise their manufacturing operations. It also provides tools to help small businesses measure the results and returns from using an AI agent rather than a human worker, so owners can make immediate, practical decisions.

“Actually smaller companies are benefiting from it already, but the bigger ones are still talking about it,” Zhou said. “When we talk to large enterprises about AI, their chief risk officers step in. Everyone will have a voice.”

Advertisement
Select Voice
Select Speed
1.00x