Alibaba Group Holding on Wednesday launched an artificial intelligence-powered ranking feature on its online mapping service Amap, as the tech giant doubles down on AI applications and deepens its rivalry with food delivery leader Meituan.
Amap Street Stars, a ranking featured on the app’s homepage, used AI algorithms to rank offline destinations including restaurants, hotels and tourist attractions, to “advance Amap’s role as the gateway for lifestyle services”, Alibaba said at the launch event on Wednesday. Alibaba owns the South China Morning Post.
The service will initially cover over 300 cities and make recommendations for 1.6 million local businesses, with the algorithm synthesising data sources that include navigation patterns and user reviews.
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“Authenticity is the ranking’s core principle,” Guo Ning, chief executive of Amap, said at the launch event held at Alibaba’s headquarters in Hangzhou. “It is based entirely on the real behaviour and high credit ratings of a large number of users.”
A screenshot of the new Amap Street Stars feature. Photo: Handout alt=A screenshot of the new Amap Street Stars feature. Photo: Handout>
The new service represents the latest competitive move between Alibaba, the US$300 billion-market cap e-commerce giant created by Jack Ma, and Meituan, the delivery service giant with an $80 billion market cap founded by Wang Xing, to woo consumers through innovative services. The new Alibaba feature is seen as a direct competitor to Meituan’s Dianping restaurant rating app.
In response, Beijing-based Meituan on Wednesday said it would apply AI models to screen consumer reviews of restaurants and merchants and launch a “quality food delivery” service on the Dianping app.
The new Amap feature filled a gap among similar ranking products in the market by making customised recommendations using AI, said Lan Xiaohuan, an economics professor at Shanghai-based China Europe International Business School.
“For instance, it can make recommendations based on exact user requests such as those based on weather conditions or different times of day, which cannot be fulfilled by the standardised rankings,” Lan said.
Alibaba’s Hong Kong-listed shares gained 1.6 per cent on Thursday morning, while Meituan gained 3.2 per cent.
Amap would also provide over 1 billion yuan (US$140.3 million) in subsidies to cover ride-hailing journeys and offline restaurant purchases to further drive user engagement and consumption at these destinations. With these efforts, the new feature was expected to help deliver an additional 10 million daily customers to local businesses, according to Amap.
For Alibaba, the move is part of broader efforts to pull together its different business units and drive growth across its expansive ecosystem to boost the group’s bread-and-butter e-commerce business in the face of fierce competition from Meituan, PDD Holdings, JD.com and Douyin, the sister app of TikTok owned by ByteDance.
The launch event was held at Alibaba’s headquarters in Hangzhou on Wednesday. Photo: Handout alt=The launch event was held at Alibaba’s headquarters in Hangzhou on Wednesday. Photo: Handout>
Amap, previously a unit under Alibaba’s Local Services Group, is now categorised under “all other” businesses after the company consolidated its operations in recent years to focus on the core activities of e-commerce and cloud computing.
The platform now has 170 million daily active users, processing over 120 million searches and more than 13 million navigation requests to local businesses each day, according to its latest data.
In June, a further restructuring move saw Alibaba’s food delivery platform Ele.me and online travel agency Fliggy folded into its core e-commerce business.
The restructuring marked “a strategic upgrade from an e-commerce platform to a comprehensive consumer platform”, Alibaba CEO Eddie Wu Yongming said in a letter to employees at the time.
Taobao, the company’s flagship online marketplace, launched a free membership system last month that integrates a number of the firm’s services, including Ele.me, Fliggy, grocery chain Freshippo and Amap.
This article originally appeared in the South China Morning Post (SCMP), the most authoritative voice reporting on China and Asia for more than a century. For more SCMP stories, please explore the SCMP app or visit the SCMP’s Facebook and Twitter pages. Copyright © 2025 South China Morning Post Publishers Ltd. All rights reserved.
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