Wednesday 29 December 2010

Social Commerce: Leading the Future of Online Shopping & Payments


Until recently, e-commerce was the domain of online shopping sites and payments was a fenced-off part of a now-familiar ‘check-out’ process.   With the emergence of social and geo-location-based services, e-commerce will change fundamentally.  This will disrupt the current online payments process and require more flexible and customisable solutions.  This blog entry looks at the emergence of social commerce, early market leaders and possible implications for online payments.

Although online social networks have been around since the late 90s (sixdegrees.com launched in 1997), the tipping point can be traced to 2003 when PC penetration, the emergence of broadband technologies and the rise of software platforms fuelled the growth of these networks.

Today, these networks have fundamentally changed the online experience from a passive, read-only mode, to an active, read-write experience.  The corporate world has thrown itself on the bandwagon and nearly all companies now have a presence on social networks.  Still, very few have cracked how to transform this presence to dollars on the bottom line. 

In a recent edition of the Lydian Journal, Karen Webster identified 4 forces that will trigger a tipping point for social commerce:

The explosive growth of social networks
·  75% of worldwide online users now visit social networks or blogs, a 24% increase from 2009 
·  Although younger users are more likely to visit social networks, half of Internet users aged 50 – 64 and one in four of users aged 65 or older now use social networks
·   Among the different networks, Facebook is the largest with close to 600 million users, followed by Twitter (190M), MySpace (122M) and LinkedIn (70M)

Social networks become the dominant destinations online
·  Time spent on social networks Facebook and Twitter accounts for nearly one-quarter of the time spent online for Americans, up nearly 50 percent from a year ago
·  One explanation is that social platforms allow their users to do everything from online gaming to messaging with friends to exploring their interests and favourite brands, and thus economise on their time spent online
·  Mobile phones are also increasing the time we spend on social networks; 150 million people connect to Facebook via their mobile and 37% of Twitter users connect via their mobile

Social networks are high-trust sources of information
·  People join social networks to be part of a connected community
·  Communities of peers are high-trust networks where users are more willing to disclose personal information and even make purchases
·  Peer-to-peer word-of-mouth has always been a source of valued, dependable information – social networks have the potential to systematise this and become a hub for purchasing decisions

Merchant begin to see the value and growing importance of social networks
·  Based on the above factors, merchants are beginning to view social networks as a sales channel with which to turn fans into customers
·  Nearly all major retailers have a fan page on Facebook as traffic to their own websites is being cannibalized by traffic on Facebook, where fans are more willing to buy and advocate on behalf of the brand
·  Analysts estimate the value of an average Facebook fan to be $136.38, suggesting that fans are likely to spend an extra $71.84 they would not otherwise have spent
·  More than half of Twitter-users recommend companies or products in their Tweets, with just about that same percentage actually following through to buy that product

Although social networks clearly represent a fantastic prospective sales channel, very few companies have yet managed to generate revenues on these platforms.  Attempts to tap into this opportunity can be grouped in three categories:
·  Shopping cart technology that facilitates check-outs on Facebook (e.g. Payvment)
·  Deal-sites off social networks that drive sales at discounts (e.g. Groupon or Living Spaces)
·  Promotional activities aimed at driving traffic to online or offline stores off social networks (e.g. JetBlue’s Twitter promotions)

However, the next years will no doubt see tremendous innovation and social networks will transform our current experience of online shopping.  New forms of online shopping are likely to tap into social dynamics in new ways and will require more flexible and customisable shopping and payment interfaces. 

It is therefore essential that payment providers develop technologies that can support this development. PayPal and IP Commerce have approached this challenge by opening up their platforms to external developers.  However, the other major players, such as Visa, MasterCard and American Express will undoubtedly have their own responses.

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