How ChinaMarket uses digital tools to make cross-border sourcing faster and more accessible for smaller businesses

A rack of colourful scarves. PHOTO: UNSPLASH
The 5th RCEP (Shandong) Import Commodities Expo opened this week at the Linyi International Expo Center, bringing together more than 5,300 buyers and over 400 exhibitors from 48 countries. Alongside the scale of the event, a quieter shift was visible in how trade itself is being organised.
ChinaMarket, the official platform of Linyi Mall, used the expo to show how sourcing is moving from manual coordination to software-led systems. On the first day, it hosted procurement matchmaking sessions and signed agreements with buyer groups from Argentina, South Korea and Ghana. But the focus was less on the deals themselves and more on the mechanism behind them.
The platform operates as a structured network of verified manufacturers, grouped by industrial clusters. Instead of buyers searching supplier by supplier, the system uses data and AI tools to match demand with production capacity. At the expo, this process was made visible through real-time data screens and guided sourcing sessions, where procurement teams connected directly with factories across categories such as building materials, textiles and electronics.
"Sourcing suppliers separately was time-consuming and inefficient. ChinaMarket accurately matches our needs and recommends reliable factories, saving us considerable effort," commented an Argentine buyer.
The underlying problem being addressed is not new. Cross-border sourcing is often slow, fragmented and dependent on intermediaries. What is changing is how that process is being compressed. By combining supplier verification, demand matching and communication into a single system, platforms like ChinaMarket aim to shorten sourcing cycles. They also reduce uncertainty in procurement decisions.
Financing is another layer where the model is evolving. Even when suppliers and buyers are matched efficiently, access to capital can still slow transactions down. Small and medium-sized firms often face constraints around payment terms and access to credit in international trade.
ChinaMarket’s “data + order financing” model links transaction data with financial services, allowing funding decisions to be tied more directly to verified orders rather than external collateral. In practice, this shifts part of the risk assessment from institutions to platform-level data.
The company is also extending this structure into agricultural supply chains. At the expo, it signed an agreement with a local government in Yinan County to build a digitally managed agricultural belt. The model combines sourcing at origin with platform distribution, with an emphasis on traceability for buyers across RCEP markets. This reflects a broader attempt to standardise supply visibility in sectors that are typically less digitised.
Geographically, the platform has been expanding into Southeast Asia. It has launched a digital marketplace in Malaysia and established operations in Indonesia, including support for government-linked procurement projects. These moves suggest a focus on embedding the platform within regional trade flows rather than operating as a standalone marketplace.
"We aim to be a 'super connector' between Chinese industrial belts and global markets", said Quan Chuanxiao, Chairman of Depth Digital Technology Group and ChinaMarket. "By digitizing the cross-border trade process, we solve trust and efficiency issues, making it simpler, faster, and more reliable for overseas buyers to source from China".
What emerges from the expo is less about a single platform and more about a shift in infrastructure. Trade is gradually moving toward systems where discovery, verification, negotiation and financing are handled within integrated digital layers. The question is not whether sourcing can be digitised, but how reliably these systems can scale across industries where trust and execution still depend on physical outcomes.
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Examining the shift from fast answers to verified intelligence in enterprise AI.
Updated
January 8, 2026 6:33 PM

Startup employee reviewing business metrics on an AI-powered dashboard. PHOTO: FREEPIK
Neuron7.ai, a company that builds AI systems to help service teams resolve technical issues faster, has launched Neuro. It is a new kind of AI agent built for environments where accuracy matters more than speed. From manufacturing floors to hospital equipment rooms, Neuro is designed for situations where a wrong answer can halt operations.
What sets Neuro apart is its focus on reliability. Instead of relying solely on large language models that often produce confident but inaccurate responses, Neuro combines deterministic AI — which draws on verified, trusted data — with autonomous reasoning for more complex cases. This hybrid design helps the system provide context-aware resolutions without inventing answers or “hallucinating”, a common issue that has made many enterprises cautious about adopting agentic AI.
“Enterprise adoption of agentic AI has stalled despite massive vendor investment. Gartner predicts 40% of projects will be canceled by 2027 due to reliability concerns”, said Niken Patel, CEO and Co-Founder of Neuron7. “The root cause is hallucinations. In service operations, outcomes are binary. An issue is either resolved or it is not. Probabilistic AI that is right only 70% of the time fails 30% of your customers and that failure rate is unacceptable for mission-critical service”.
That concern shaped how Neuro was built. “We use deterministic guided fixes for known issues. No guessing, no hallucinations — and reserve autonomous AI reasoning for complex scenarios. What sets Neuro apart is knowing which mode to use. While competitors race to make agents more autonomous, we're focused on making service resolution more accurate and trusted”, Patel explained.
At the heart of Neuro is the Smart Resolution Hub, Neuron7’s central intelligence layer that consolidates service data, knowledge bases and troubleshooting workflows into one conversational experience. This means a technician can describe a problem — say, a diagnostic error in an MRI scanner — and Neuro can instantly generate a verified, step-by-step solution. If the problem hasn’t been encountered before, it can autonomously scan through thousands of internal and external data points to identify the most likely fix, all while maintaining traceability and compliance.
Neuro’s architecture also makes it practical for real-world use. It integrates seamlessly with enterprise systems such as Salesforce, Microsoft, ServiceNow and SAP, allowing companies to embed it within their existing support operations. Early users of Neuron7’s platform have reported measurable improvements — faster resolutions, higher customer satisfaction and reduced downtime — thanks to guided intelligence that scales expert-level problem solving across teams.
The timing of Neuro’s debut feels deliberate. As organizations look to move past the hype of generative AI, trust and accountability have become the new benchmarks. AI systems that can explain their reasoning and stay within verifiable boundaries are emerging as the next phase of enterprise adoption.
“The market has figured out how to build autonomous agents”, Patel said. “The unsolved problem is building accurate agents for contexts where errors have consequences. Neuro fills that gap”.
Neuron7 is building a system that knows its limits — one that reasons carefully, acts responsibly and earns trust where it matters most. In a space dominated by speculation, that discipline may well redefine what “intelligent” really means in enterprise AI.