share

BLOG

What Can We Learn From Social Commerce?

Driven by our increasing use of social media, especially amongst Gen Zs and millennials, the global social commerce industry is predicted to be worth over a trillion dollars by 2025 (yes, you read that right).

But what is social commerce and what can we learn from it?

Read on to find out why social commerce in Australia is on the rise, and what we can take from the changing landscape to boost sales.

What is social commerce?

Buying online is second-nature to us now. After lockdowns that kept us away from brick-and-mortar stores, shopping online (and having a package arrive on the doorstep at least once a week) has become the norm as we find and purchase the products we want.

Social commerce takes things a step further. Instead of social media pages referring customers to their online store to complete their purchase, social commerce facilitates the buying and selling of products directly within a social media platform.

While platforms like Instagram and Facebook started as a great way of boosting brand awareness and allowing customers to discover products or companies, social commerce brings this full circle: completing the purchase decision in the same place.

An example of social commerce in action might be:

  1. You follow a clothing brand on Instagram
  2. They post a photo of a shirt that you like, with a click-through link tagged on the photo
  3. You click through to the product details
  4. You buy the shirt directly within the Instagram Shopping feature

Social commerce is important in 2022 because there is no need to venture off-platform — all the action conveniently happens right where you are in that moment.

What are the benefits of social commerce?

There are many benefits of social commerce to capitalise on.

The most obvious benefit is the introduction of a social element to the user experience of purchasing online. Customers can see comments from other shoppers and interact with the brand directly, in the same place as they make their own purchase.

In the same way, marketers can poll their audience and view customers’ profiles — it’s valuable market research, and little effort is required to obtain it.

Another major benefit of social commerce is that the industry is worth nearly $500 billion globally — and we guarantee you want a slice of that pie.

What’s the difference between social commerce, e-commerce, and social media marketing?

With so many terms at play, it can be confusing to pinpoint the difference between social commerce, e-commerce, and social media marketing.

  • Social media marketing is using social platforms like Instagram, Facebook and LinkedIn to promote and advertise your brand or product (and here’s why you should use Meta for property marketing).
  • E-commerce is a much broader term that refers to any buying or selling of goods online; just think of your favourite in-real-life shopping centre, but everything is online.
  • Social commerce is a combination of the two. It involves brands and products being marketed on the same platform as the e-commerce purchasing process takes place.

What can we learn from social commerce?

Whether or not you’re in the business of e-commerce in Australia, there are important things we can learn from the rapid rise of social commerce.

1) Create a seamless user experience

In an increasingly busy world, it’s more important than ever to create easy, intuitive processes for customers. Social commerce is a fantastic example of making the user experience as seamless as possible.

By meeting the customer where they are and taking a mobile-first approach in the apps they’re already using, we lower the barriers to purchase. This is a learning that applies to all companies: identify where the falloff is, make your processes as easy and streamlined as possible for the customer, and they’ll be less likely to turn away.

2) Adapt to changing habits

If the expansion of nearly every social media platform to integrate a shopping feature tells us one thing, it’s that we have to adapt to the changing digital landscape to stay relevant and serve our audience’s needs. Just look at the list of platforms facilitating social commerce:

This proves that we can use social for every step of the sales funnel.

3) Integrating is possible

A huge benefit of social commerce is that it integrates the process from initial exposure to purchase in the one platform. This proves that we can use social for every step of the sales funnel.

Every company undertaking digital marketing aims to move customers from awareness and consideration to purchase. Social commerce demonstrates how, with a little innovation, we can walk customers through each of the phases without the hassle of moving them between platforms.

How can understanding social commerce help us boost sales?

With the above takeaways, we can see that there’s a lot to learn from social commerce — even if you don’t deal in the e-commerce industry.

If customers need to switch between platforms or navigate away from the pages we want them on, they’re likely to lose interest and end up not converting. Creating the most seamless user experience possible is critical in maintaining consumer attention and building a relationship of trust with your audience, which are both key in ultimately realising a sale.

By keeping on top of changes to the digital landscape, we future-proof our brand and help maintain sales into the future. With contactless and online purchasing on the rise thanks to the pandemic, there will likely come a time when we make bigger purchases — like a car, a holiday, or a house — on our phones.

What does this mean for you?

Trends in social commerce are relevant to all of us because the face of the digital world is always changing, and we need to change with it.

No Comments

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

How to level up your video content, and when to scale it back
How to level up your video content, and when to scale it back

If you’re wanting to get into the video content game, either as a content creator yourself or as a client, it’s good to understand the basics of...

How to Save Time on Your Social Media: Enhancing Organic Processes

Are you tired of feeling like your social media efforts are falling flat? Do you find yourself running out of time to throw something together for...

Why Should You Choose UGC Over Stock-Standard Content?

In the fast-paced world of digital marketing, authenticity is the currency of trust, and engagement is the ultimate goal. Amidst the noise of branded...

The Role of Pre-Production Planning in UGC Shoot Days

In the fast-paced world of digital marketing, user-generated content (UGC) has become a powerful tool for brands to connect with their audiences...

Why You Should Use Psychographics in Your Property Marketing

In the realm of real estate marketing, one size does not fit all. For property clients like real estate developers who sell housing estates,...

The Power of Persuasion: How To Boost Digital Marketing with Copywriting

Digital marketing is always evolving, and, the art of persuasion is the secret sauce that can turn a casual click into a committed customer (what...

Understanding the Latest Google & Yahoo Email Deliverability Updates

What you need to know Heads up, marketers! Google and Yahoo have just shaken things up in the email world, and your delivery rates might start to...

Mastering Multi-Channel Marketing Campaigns

Mastering Marketing Automation Multi-Channel Mediums As shocking as this sounds, the average attention span of a user in the digital landscape is...

The 6 Email Nurtures To Set You Up For Success

A quick question for you: Are you still sending one-off email campaigns with no clear intentions or progression? Do you feel that your contacts are...

How To Optimise Your Channel Mix in a Changing Property Market

It’s no secret that we’ve seen the property market soften through the back end of 2022 and into 2023. As we turn our focus to FY24, looking...

newsletter

Fortnightly digital marketing tips and insights