HANGZHOU, China — Alibaba Group CEO Eddie Wu will launch a new enterprise AI agent this week, according to internal company memos, marking the tech giant’s most aggressive push into autonomous software.
The rollout targets millions of corporate clients who currently rely on manual cloud operations. However, internal restructuring documents reviewed by reporters reveal that recent executive departures now threaten to derail the highly anticipated release of the Qwen-powered tool.
The new product specifically targets businesses utilizing DingTalk, Alibaba’s workplace messaging platform. An estimated 20 million enterprise clients operate within this ecosystem, though the initial launch restricts access to a select group of commercial beta testers.
Employment filings examined by this newsroom expose severe turbulence within the core development team. The abrupt resignation of Qwen technical lead Junyang Lin in early March marks the third senior AI executive to abandon the flagship project in 2026.
In Hangzhou, where Alibaba bases its primary cloud infrastructure, local tech sector recruiters report a sudden surge in former Alibaba engineers seeking new placements. By contrast, rival tech firms in Shenzhen are actively poaching this displaced talent to build competing autonomous systems.
Budget papers indicate Wu formed an emergency internal task force to stabilize the platform’s architecture following the walkouts. This internal crisis directly contradicts the confident public narrative surrounding the company’s $53 billion infrastructure investment plan announced last year.
Alibaba Restructuring Reveals Severe AI Leadership Vacuum
To consolidate control over the fragmented development cycle, Wu established the Alibaba Token Hub, a new centralized business unit. The division absorbs previously siloed departments into a single, tightly controlled reporting structure under his direct supervision.
The newly formed hub consolidates four distinct corporate divisions:
- Core artificial intelligence research and development
- Consumer-facing application engineering teams
- The DingTalk workplace messaging division
- The Quark smart glasses hardware brand
The company released its Qwen 3.5 foundational model in February, promising autonomous task execution across web browsers and cloud servers. This technology, known in the industry as agentic AI, allows software to independently purchase items, manage emails, and execute complex workflows without human prompting.
$53 Billion Strategy Pressures Qwen Development Timelines
Executives plan to aggressively expand the agent’s footprint beyond basic corporate messaging. The broader ecosystem will eventually force integration with the company’s retail and financial arms, according to Alibaba’s official investor relations documentation.
| Platform Integration | Target Rollout Phase | Target User Base |
|---|
| Platform Integration | Target Rollout Phase | Target User Base |
|---|---|---|
| DingTalk | Launch week | Business operations |
| Taobao | Q3 2026 | E-commerce shoppers |
| Alipay | Q4 2026 | Financial consumers |
“We prioritize platform stability across all foundational enterprise models,” Eddie Wu stated in a company-wide email obtained by reporters.
Alibaba reports its December quarter earnings on Thursday, March 19. Investors and market analysts expect detailed explanations regarding both the leadership vacuum and the precise revenue models attached to the new AI agent.

