Fushi Tech Unveils AI Agent Strategy Targeting Overseas Merchants
- Written by Media Outreach
SINGAPORE - Media OutReach Newswire - 20 May 2026 - Fushi Tech, a subsidiary of Yeahka (9923.HK), has announced a strategic upgrade with the launch of Fynix AI shop, a Full-stack AI Agent product purpose-built for overseas merchants. Unlike conventional marketing tools or customer service systems, Fynix AI shop is designed to function as a genuine "digital employee" — one that actively participates in day-to-day business operations. It understands merchant needs, breaks down tasks, and executes them autonomously, supporting merchants across the full commercial cycle of customer acquisition, conversion, payment, and repeat purchases. This is not simply a product update. It marks a fundamental shift in how merchants approach digital operations — and signals Fushi Tech's evolution from a traditional SaaS provider to an AI Agent platform. AI Agents: The Next Generation of Business Infrastructure Enterprise digitalisation has, for much of the past decade, remained largely at the tooling stage: merchants adopt SaaS tools and then operate manually. However, as large language models continue to mature, AI is shifting from an assistive tool to an autonomous executor. The defining value of an AI Agent lies not in answering questions, but in its ability to understand purposes, call on the right tools, complete tasks end to end, and close the loop without human intervention. Across the global technology industry, AI Agents are increasingly seen as the next major shift in enterprise software. According to IDC, investments in AI solutions and services are projected to yield a global cumulative impact of USD 22.3 trillion by 2030, representing approximately 3.7% of the global Gross Domestic Product (GDP). The trend is already taking shape in international markets. Salesforce has launched Agentforce, while emerging players such as Sierra AI are attracting significant capital, with the industry broadly applying valuation multiples of 30 to 60 times ARR to leading companies. These figures reflect the market's long-term expectation in the commercial value of AI-powered employees. For Fushi Tech, the launch of Fynix AI shop is also a response to a structural gap it has observed over years of serving merchants across Southeast Asia. Many small and mid-sized merchants in the region still operate through fragmented digital systems — with point-of-sale, CRM, marketing, delivery, and customer service tools running in silos, data unable to flow between them, and key operational tasks still heavily dependent on manual effort. Merchants may have adopted software, but genuine gains in operational efficiency have remained elusive. AI Agents now make a unified operational hub possible for the first time. Fushi Tech's goal is not to optimize isolated steps in the process, but to have AI directly execute business operations on the merchant's behalf. With AI Shop, merchants don't learn to operate software — they manage an employee. This shift reflects a broader transformation underway in enterprise services — from selling tools to delivering outcomes. A growing consensus is also emerging across the AI industry: as the underlying capabilities of large models converge, the real differentiator is increasingly a company's ability to connect AI with real-world business. Fushi Tech has positioned itself accordingly. Where many Western AI companies focus primarily on model capabilities and generative AI, Fushi Tech emphasizes deep integration across payments, CRM, and AI — keeping its offering close to the transaction itself. Fynix AI shop is beyond a chatbot, it connects to a complete operational ecosystem: drawing on CRM data to understand customers, processing transactions through the payments infrastructure, and integrating with external platforms including WhatsApp, Telegram, Google, and delivery services. This means AI is no longer simply capable of conversation — it is genuinely capable of doing business. And that is precisely the hardest part of bringing AI Agents to market at scale. The challenges extend well beyond algorithms, requiring engineering depth, merchant networks, payments infrastructure, and years of accumulated industry knowledge. In this sense, the companies best placed to build durable competitive advantages in AI may not be pure-play model providers, but those capable of embedding AI directly into real industry workflows. From "SaaS Tool" to "AI Employee" At the product level, Fynix AI shop exhibits the hallmarks of a digital employee, executing tasks autonomously across the merchant's full operational cycle. Its core capabilities include:
- Content generation: Automatically creates menu pages, product listings, and marketing materials
- Intelligent conversation: Guides customers through product recommendations, conversion, and order placement in a natural, sales-driven interaction
- In-conversation payments: Completes transactions directly within the chat interface
- Cu...
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