Social Commerce Is About More Than Driving Up Immediate Conversions
BIISocial commerce conversion rates are undeniably low. Sites like Facebook, Twitter, and Pinterest trail email and search in terms of the number of visitors who click on a post and make a purchase.
But social still has a potent influence on consumers' decisions further along the "purchase funnel." Evidence shows that paid and organic posts on social platforms drive sales completed online and offline later on.
In a new report from BI Intelligence we break down how social media is impacting retail sales throughout the purchase process - whether a social media user clicks directly from a retailer's Facebook ad to make a purchase, or sees a pin on Pinterest and ends up buying the product in-store a week later. We look at the varied metrics that underscore social commerce performance at the different networks, including conversion rates, average order value, and revenue generated by shares, likes, and tweets. We also outline the latest commerce efforts by leading social networks.
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Here are a selection of the key points from the report:
- Social commerce is growing quickly: The top 500 retailers earned $2.69 billion from social shopping in 2013, according to the Internet Retailer's Social Media 500, up more than 60% over 2012, while the e-commerce market as a whole grew only 17%.
- Social commerce is even larger in terms of revenue generation when looking not at traditional direct referrals, when the last click before purchase happens on a social-media site, but when looking at where consumers began their purchase process, i.e., the first click.
- Growth is sure to accelerate and conversion rates should improve as Twitter and Facebook roll out "Buy" buttons, which will allow social-network audiences to initiate an e-commerce purchase by clicking on a retailer's post or tweet. Facebook's tests began in July, Twitter's in September.
- Facebook is the clear leader for social-commerce referrals and sales: This is due in large part to the sheer size of its audience - 71% of US adult internet users are on Facebook. A Facebook share of an e-commerce post translates to an average $3.58 in revenue from sales, according to AddShoppers. On Twitter, a share or retweet is worth only 85 cents.
- But other sites are gaining, and even leading on, specific metrics, like average order value (AOV): Polyvore, for example, sees $66.75 in AOV from social referrals, according to Shopify. Pinterest sees $65. That's compared to Facebook, which sees $55 AOV. Pinterest also drives more social sharing of retail content than any other network including Facebook.
In full, the report:
- Sizes social media's role for retailers compared to other major referral sources
- Looks at how the different social networks stack up in terms of conversion rates, share of social-generated retail sales, and average order value
- Examines why Facebook alone plays such a massive role for e-commerce companies, driving a huge share of referrals and still beating out other social networks for conversions
- Points to the metrics that still make other, smaller social networks compelling for retailers, including sites like Polyvore, Pinterest, and Instagram
- Outlines the latest major commerce moves by Facebook and Twitter, which could help drive up conversion rates directly from social
- Notes retailers that have built whole businesses on Facebook, showing the very real opportunity for social and commerce to work together
BII