What is social commerce?
Social
commerce can be thought of simply as the intersection between social
media and e-commerce. Think of it as how you can use social media to
drive consumer interactions and engagement as part of the process of
selling.
Techniques
span everything from simply having a Facebook page that drives
traffic to your website, social plugins (such as the Facebook "like"
buttons and social logins), user-contributed reviews on your
e-commerce site, Facebook-specific promotions, and full-blown
Facebook stores.
How brands can use social commerce
There's
a lot of experimentation going on as brand marketers explore the new
frontiers of social commerce. At times, it feels like the Wild West
-- a frantic race to unlock hidden gold buried somewhere in Facebook.
Experimentation is good -- after all, if we can find new ways to
leverage the Facebook powerhouse to do more than drive traffic, then
there's definitely gold to be discovered.
With
all this frantic activity, it's worth looking again at how customers
buy, why they don't, and the role that social media plays in loyalty
and driving conversions. Loyalty is important because it drives
profitability -- repeat customers are many times more profitable than
new ones. And loyalty principles are inherent to social media
success; even if loyalty is a slightly old-fashioned term, there are
many lessons that can be applied to social media.
A
recent PwC
research paper sheds
new light on what we already know: When consumers were asked to rank
factors that influence purchase decisions, they were driven by price
and their experience with a brand over all else. PwC notes that
long-term relationships were formed by friendly, helpful service and
the people behind it. This can be thought of simply as the "brand
experience." Loyalty programs rank last.
The
"brand experience" is the user's perception of the brand,
while interacting across channels and spanning experiences that
define the relationship, especially when things go wrong.
While
this research confirms what we already suspected, it does shed new
light on how we should view social commerce, as many social
programs are focused on building the "social channel,"
rather than using social to serve customers better.
Many
brands have social media teams focused on decoding the social media
formula. These separate teams are reminiscent of the early days of
e-commerce, when many companies set up a group focused on how to make
e-commerce work. This resulted in stovepipes, in which e-commerce was
separated from the rest of the business, and then needed to be
re-integrated as it became clear that e-commerce was not a business
in its own right, but a channel that needed to be integrated
with all other channels. In time, I suspect that we will view social
media in the same way, as a communication and engagement platform
that needs to be integral to the rest of the business, rather than
standalone. Social media will be key in shaping the brand experience,
but will do so in conjunction with all the other channels and not as
a channel in its own right.
I'm
sure that some will take issue with this -- if you're selling a
service that enables brands to offer Facebook storefronts
(f-commerce), then this is heresy. But my perspective is different. I
look at what the data tell us about how, why, and where customers
want to buy.
In
the light of this, let's consider five home truths about social
commerce.
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