Ding! Always-on Alibaba office app fuels backlash among
Chinese workers
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[August 03, 2018]
By Yawen Chen and Christian Shepherd
BEIJING/HANGZHOU, China (Reuters) - In the
cramped former home of Jack Ma, founder of the Chinese e-commerce giant
Alibaba, about thirty young engineers sit elbow-to-elbow, working to
attract the next million users for DingTalk, Alibaba's workplace
communication software.
Their installation in the hallowed flat where Ma got his start in the
eastern city of Hangzhou reflects DingTalk's place in the pecking order
of the company's sprawling collection of start-up projects.
Since December 2014, DingTalk has grown exponentially to become the
world's largest chat service designed for companies, with over 100
million individual users and 7 million employers across China. The
company says, without providing numbers, that it also has a growing
presence in Europe, the United States and Southeast Asia.
But its rapid rise - propelled by a promise to boost productivity
through better monitoring of employee movements and faster responses to
important messages - has sparked a backlash from Chinese workers who say
the app fuels an unhealthy work culture.
That also raises questions about DingTalk's ability to expand into the
West, where people are typically guarded about their workplace privacy.
In China, surveillance by the authorities and employers is already
common.
Like WhatsApp, DingTalk lets senders see if recipients have read
messages, but it also has a "ding" feature that can bombard recipients
with repeat notifications, text messages and phone-call reminders.
On top of this original feature, the company has added a wide range of
functions that include automatic expense claims, a clock-in system to
monitor the whereabouts of employees, as well as a "daily report"
function that requires workers to list completed tasks.
As DingTalk has grown, many Chinese office workers have vented their
frustrations online about the service, saying it is inhumane and
destroys trust.
On Zhihu.com, a question-and-answer website, a thread entitled "how does
it feel like to be forced to use DingTalk at work" has more than a
thousand posts and has been viewed over 7.7 million times.
An informal Reuters poll of 30 workers using DingTalk showed that about
half had negative feelings about the app, while the rest said they were
fine with it - often because their companies had not adopted features
such as the clock-in function.
"There's a saying in my circle, that you should quit the day your
company installs DingTalk," said Robert, who works in luxury retail in
the northwestern province of Shaanxi and complains that DingTalk has
"fragmented his time into pieces". He declined to provide his surname.
Li Xiaoyang, a former software sales agent in Beijing, said he had to
use DingTalk's geo-location function at his previous firm whenever he
met a client, and use a face scanner to verify he was attending
meetings.
"I felt so disgusted by it," he said, adding that he was constantly
dinged by managers.
"Every level of management thinks their demand is the top priority and
should be dealt with first," he said. "Even worse, they will ding you
through DingTalk even on holiday and you can't pretend you didn't see
it."
WECHAT RIVAL
DingTalk sprang from Alibaba's unsuccessful attempt to challenge the
WeChat instant messenger of its arch-rival, Tencent Holdings Ltd, the
service's chief executive, Wu Zhao, said in an interview.
"We came to understand that we did not understand social media
platforms," Wu said at DingTalk's offices in Hangzhou, where Alibaba has
its headquarters.
Instead, Wu's team sought another niche, tackling a common managerial
complaint in China: workers who fail to reply to messages and later
feign ignorance.
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Employees work at DingTalk office, an offshoot of Alibaba Group
Holding Ltd, in Hangzhou, Zhejiang province, China July 20, 2018.
Picture taken July 20, 2018. REUTERS/Aly Song
The driving force behind DingTalk's growth has been solving the organizational
concerns of Chinese firms and providing - for free - a platform that gives
companies a level of efficiency similar to Alibaba's, Wu said.
"What Jack Ma said to me was: 'Wu Zhao, helping small and medium enterprises is
our company's mission. You go do that; don't concern yourself with making
money'," he said.
Asked about DingTalk's business model, Wu said the company was focusing on
helping companies become transparent and efficient, rather than making a profit.
The app's basic features are all free, but users have to pay for hardware and
additional cloud storage or conference call minutes, as well as for third party
services.
Alibaba does not specify DingTalk's revenue in its financial statements.
Wu is aware of the backlash DingTalk is facing, but says the problem is a "toxic
work culture at some companies" and misuse by some employers.
"The tool itself is not the problem; the way it is used is the problem," he
said.
FRUSTRATIONS
Records from the app have been used by companies as evidence to fire employees
and dock pay, according to labor-related lawsuits seen by Reuters in court
filings.
But DingTalk also wins praise as a productivity aid.
"It saves a lot of time as you no longer need to sit in physical conference
calls and make phone calls. For important matters, you just need to ding
someone," said Liu Sufen, a spokeswoman at the Chinese bicycle-sharing firm
Hellobike.
For larger companies, like Dongguan Meishang Clothing, which has a nation-wide
client base and more than 3,000 employees, DingTalk has helped reduce costs and
increase efficiency, said Peng Xiang, the company's information director.
"Before we used DingTalk, it was nearly impossible for employees to communicate
directly with the boss; however with DingTalk this becomes possible and easy."
Peng said approval processes that once took a week could now be done in an hour
on DingTalk.
Despite the grumbling, Wu believes the service will translate across borders and
cultures - even in the West.
"If you come into Starbucks in the morning and you are told you can't buy coffee
because their staff hasn't arrived, will you accept that? Even the Europeans
won't accept tardiness."
However, Chen Bikui, a partner at Liuhe Ventures who invests in enterprise
software startups, said he doubted that DingTalk would succeed abroad, citing
issues like privacy concerns in the West.
"DingTalk is so much tailored to Chinese companies - it would be hard for it to
be adopted by companies from other countries," he said.
(Reporting by Yawen Chen in BEIJING and Christian Shepherd in HANGZHOU;
Additional Reporting by Beijing Newsroom and Elias Glenn; Editing by Tony Munroe
and Philip McClellan)
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