AI wave reshaping job market landscape in China


A pedestrian waits to cross an intersection outside an Alibaba office building in Beijing, China March 27, 2025. Nearly half of Alibaba's spring internship openings are closely related to AI. - Reuters

BEIJING: As more Chinese industry titans enter the realm of AI, their intensified scramble for talent by offering generous salary packages may prove the predictions by experts and industry insiders correct, that AI is reshaping the domestic employment landscape over the spring recruitment sason while also incubating more new job opportunities.

Alibaba started its spring internship hiring campaign in February by offering over 3,000 openings to fresh graduates, and nearly half of these internship openings are closely related to AI, such as in research and development and algorithms. Tencent launched its internship campaign in the same month with over 7,000 positions available to college students, and more than 60 per cent of these positions focused on cutting-edge fields including AI, big data and cloud computing.

These companies' moves have epitomised China's intensified scramble for AI-focused talent after DeepSeek kicked off a national craze for AI earlier this spring. Meanwhile, jobseekers with a knowledge of or background in AI are also showing greater confidence in their prospects.

Li Qiang, vice-president of recruitment portal Zhaopin, said that the AI-focused job openings on the platform increased by three per cent year-on-year in the week after the Spring Festival holiday ended in February, and notably those seeking employment as algorithm engineers surged by 125.5 per cent year-on-year over that week.

Li added that Beijing, Shenzhen in Guangdong province and Hangzhou in Zhejiang province have formed a "golden triangle" for AI-focused talent.

Hesai Technology in Shanghai has shown growing interest in hiring talent with an AI background as the company develops light detection and ranging products mainly used in advanced driver assistance systems, robotics and autonomous driving.

Wu Qingliang, the company's head of recruitment, advised university students to take notice of developments in AI and find ways to build a connection between these and what they have learned.

Zhang Yu, who will graduate from the School of Computer Science and Technology of East China Normal University, recently submitted several resumes at a job fair in Shanghai. He said that the prospects offered by the industry are more important to him than salary. "If we say the past two decades were the era of the internet and the mobile internet, the next two decades will be the era of AI," he added.

Some traditional internet companies have also been actively seeking AI talent. Shi Jiajia, head of global campus recruitment at Chinese tourism portal Trip.com Group, emphasised a strong demand for AI skills and talent across various roles within the company.

She said that large internet companies mainly need talent for their R&D positions, including product development, algorithms and testing, with these roles closely related to the booming AI technology.

"Even if it is not an R&D position, employees are required to have AI-related skills, a learning ability, and a good adaptability to the new world," she added.

Li from Zhaopin added that many companies are reorganising their business patterns amid the AI wave, and some of them are transforming from basic R&D of AI to the use and innovation of AI.

"Based on that, individuals who not only have a sound knowledge of AI but know the customers' exact requirements will become the most sought-after talent in the future. It's of great importance for jobseekers to combine their own advantages, skills or knowledge with AI, which will help them find new opportunities," he said. - China Daily/ANN

 

 

Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel for breaking news alerts and key updates!
China , AI , job market landscape

Next In Aseanplus News

Asean News Headlines at 10pm on Wednesday (Jan 21, 2026)
Workers' Party’s swift refusal of Opposition Leader role signals unity behind Pritam Singh, say analysts
Endangered Sunda slow loris rescued from Singapore's HDB block near Sin Ming
Sultan of Brunei leaves hospital following successful knee surgery
MIC hasn't left BN, says Zambry
Singapore proposes Asean-first mechanism to trace scam calls across borders
Ex-TVB star Fiona Leung, 60, says she doesn't mind having wrinkles, grey hair
Thai Constitutional Court clears Phumtham, Tawee in Senate probe
Fahmi: Malaysia's economy remains strong, continues to be the focus of foreign investors
Kerala High Court denies bail to former TDB president Padmakumar, two others in Sabarimala gold loot case

Others Also Read