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January 24, 2020

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Social e-commerce gains traction in China

Along with thriving social media in China, social media-related retail has been gaining traction, with innovations reshaping the retail landscape.

The penetration rate of retail based on social media reached 71 percent, said a survey issued earlier this month by the Boston Consulting Group and Tencent.

According to the survey, 61 percent of surveyed consumers would be attracted by products promoted on social media, and 69 percent of them have shared online shopping links on social media.

For enterprises, 85 percent believed social media is the most important factor when influencing consumers on deciding whether to buy a product, while 81 percent said they have been investing heavily on social media among all online channels.

Live e-commerce has become a hit in China. A growing number of small businesses are using livestreaming to display and sell their wares.

More than 100,000 sellers leapt into livestreaming on Alibaba’s Taobao online marketplace during the Singles Day online shopping bonanza first initiated by Alibaba in 2009.

Among livestreaming celebrities, Weiya took the lead with 2.7 billion yuan (US$392.44 million) of sales on November 11.

Consumers are empowered in the new digital era. WeChat, Weibo and many other social media are reshaping the e-commerce landscape.

As Chinese e-commerce consumers are predominantly mobile-savvy, online shopping is not just about adding items to their virtual shopping cart. It is already a social activity and ultimately a kind of entertainment.

The prosperity of social media has directly changed traditional business models. Retailers can shorten the distance with consumers through social media, improve communication efficiency and cut communication cost, the survey said.

The social e-commerce market exceeded 1.26 trillion yuan in 2018 and is expected to reach 2.06 trillion yuan in 2019, up 63.2 percent, said a report on the industry issued by the Internet Society of China.

Social e-commerce accounted for 14 percent of online retail transactions in 2018, and is expected to exceed 20 percent in 2019 and 30 percent in 2020, the report said.

The booming social commerce is driven by a trusted digital payment infrastructure. China has a cash-based payment system with low credit-card penetration, so there were few barriers to the adoption of mobile payments.

This has allowed for the rapid development of super-apps like WeChat, which provides more interactive opportunities for retailers and customers.

Over 50 million individual businesses were active users of WeChat Pay, one of the country’s two major third-party payment platforms, accounting for nearly 80 percent of the country’s total last year.

China’s online retail sales rose 16.5 percent year on year to top 10 trillion yuan in 2019, according to the National Bureau of Statistics.




 

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