AI Is Driving Global Trade: 63% of SMEs Already Onboard, Can You Afford to Sit It Out?

Alibaba.com hosting CoCreate 2025 in Las Vegas.

63% of SMEs Now Use AI for Cross-Border Trade—And the Rest Are Already Behind

Alibaba.com’s latest research should grab every business owner by the collar: 63% of SMEs worldwide are already tapping AI tools to handle cross-border trade. Let that sink in. Nearly two out of three small and mid-sized companies have moved past the “maybe we should try this” stage. If you’re still waiting, you’re not just cautious—you’re already lagging. In this environment, hesitation costs market share.

CoCreate 2025: A Showcase of AI’s Grip on Trade

The company rolled out its most significant AI overhaul yet at CoCreate 2025 in Las Vegas. This wasn’t a modest industry event. Over 3,500 attendees showed up. More than 25,000 SME pitches came in from 150 countries. That’s not noise—that’s momentum. When that many businesses compete for attention on a global stage, it’s because they know the stakes are real. Alibaba.com used the spotlight to prove it’s doubling down on AI-driven trade infrastructure, and the timing couldn’t be sharper.

Micro-Multinationals: The New Global Player

We’re watching the rise of what I call “micro-multinationals.” A small team—sometimes just two people—can now run operations across multiple countries without the legacy overhead that once crushed such ambitions. AI is removing friction from every step: supplier negotiations, compliance checks, logistics. These aren’t futuristic promises. They’re live, working tools that make small businesses look a lot more like global players. SMEs that used to dream of international reach now have no excuse not to pursue it.

Deep Search: Procurement Reinvented

Alibaba.com unveiled Deep Search, an AI-driven procurement tool that redefines sourcing. Instead of keyword hunting, it handles long text queries and even images, then sorts through 280 million product listings. It ranks suppliers and products by relevance, not guesswork. That matters because sourcing is often where deals stall. Deep Search reduces that friction and puts results in front of businesses in seconds. If you’ve ever spent days chasing suppliers through endless catalogs, you already know this isn’t just a nice feature—it’s survival fuel.

Accio’s Rapid Climb

The second major highlight was Accio, Alibaba.com’s AI agent for global trade. Since May 2024, its Agent Mode added 1.5 million new users in a single month. That’s a 50% spike almost overnight. The reason? It automates about 70% of manual trade workflows—product ideation, prototyping, compliance checks, supplier sourcing. Processes that once required multiple teams and weeks of coordination are now condensed into one AI-driven cycle. If you’re not using something like this, you’re not just inefficient—you’re bleeding time and opportunity.

Scale Proves Demand

CoCreate 2025 doubled in size from last year. That kind of growth doesn’t happen in a vacuum. It proves SMEs aren’t just experimenting with AI—they’re embracing it at scale. The pitch competition drew over 25,000 submissions, a number that speaks louder than any keynote. These businesses are hungry for speed and precision. And Alibaba.com’s “Super September” event poured gasoline on the fire with AI-generated sourcing lists and discounts on global bestsellers. It’s part sales push, part live experiment in how AI can drive purchasing decisions.

SMEs Can’t Sit This Out

The bottom line is hard to ignore. Global trade is shifting, and SMEs are leading the charge—not trailing behind the big players. AI has flattened barriers that once looked permanent. The 63% of businesses already using it are racing ahead. The others? They’re losing ground with each passing quarter. You don’t have to like AI. You don’t have to trust every tool. But if you’re not using it, your competitors are. And that gap is only going to widen. In cross-border trade, the new rule is clear: adapt fast or get left out of the deal flow.