Consumers can now order their favorite food and beverages from Starbucks and have them delivered within 30 minutes via the Tmall Genie. Handout.

Starbucks fans in China can already order coffee with their phones, but now grabbing a cup is as easy as asking the Tmall Genie smart speaker.

According to a report in ALIZILA.com, consumers can now order their favorite food and beverages from Starbucks and have them delivered within 30 minutes.

They can also track the delivery status of their orders in real-time, as well as connect membership accounts to the smart speaker to earn Star rewards with every purchase, which add up to free food and drinks.

Soon, members will also receive personalized recommendations based on their previous orders and trending items from Starbucks’ seasonal menu, said Alibaba A.I. Labs, the artificial-intelligence research unit behind the Tmall Genie, the report said.

Miffy Chen, general manager of Alibaba A.I. Labs, said the collaboration helps both companies meet the needs of China’s digitally savvy consumers, who are increasingly expecting seamless, on-demand deliveries for everything from ordering groceries, to food and medicine.

“We’re excited to introduce an even more diverse and enriched experience on our platform through Starbucks voice-ordering and provide a direct benefit to Chinese consumers within their daily routine,” Chen said.

Molly Liu, vice president and general manager of the digital ventures division at Starbucks China, said the new smart speaker marks a new era of digital customer engagement for Starbucks and will help “[elevate] their connection with customers to new heights.”

“We are focused on ensuring that Starbucks voice-ordering is truly personal, and we look forward to offering our customers more convenient moments and new opportunities to engage with Starbucks on a single integrated platform as they move throughout the day,” Liu said.

As part of the partnership, the Seattle-based coffee chain has also exclusively debuted a new Starbucks-themed Tmall Genie through its flagship store on Tmall, Alibaba’s B2C e-commerce site, the report said.

The smart speaker, which comes in the brand’s classic shade of green, features its teddy-bear mascot “Bearista” behind a DJ turntable. Users can play music from a curated playlist by telling the Tmall Genie to “play some Starbucks music,” a feature powered by Alibaba’s music-streaming app Xiami.

About 3,000 Starbucks Genies, priced at RMB 199 (US$28) each, sold out instantly during a recent livestream hosted by popular Taobao livestreamer Viva Huang. Huang’s five-hour stream had attracted more than 829 million views.

In 2017, Starbucks’s cafes began accepting mobile wallet Alipay for payment. In December of the same year, Starbucks opened its first roastery outside of its home market in Shanghai, which featured mobile technology and augmented-reality experiences designed by Alibaba.

While China’s per-capita demand for coffee is still a fraction of US consumption — an average mainland Chinese consumer drinks three cups a year versus 363 cups in the US — total consumption grew at an average annual rate of 16% in the last decade, significantly outpacing the world average of 2%, according to the International Coffee Organization.

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