Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight
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Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight
Social marketing, PR insight & thought leadership - from The PR Coach
Curated by Jeff Domansky
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Connected Commerce Is Creating Buyers Without Borders

Connected Commerce Is Creating Buyers Without Borders | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it

The online retail ecosystem is fast evolving, and increasingly, shoppers no longer simply go to the nearest store. Rather, they grab the nearest digital device. And with the world at our fingertips, why only shop domestically? In fact, digital analytics firm eMarketer projects that online retail sales will more than double between 2015 and 2019 and account for more than 12% of global sales by 2019. Retail therapy is giving way to e-tail therapy.

To gain a better understanding of how consumers are navigating the connected commerce landscape, the Nielsen Global Connected Commerce Survey polled respondents in 26 countries. We looked at how consumers are using the Internet to make shopping decisions both in stores and online, and we examined what they’re buying, where they’re purchasing and how they’re paying for goods and services.

While connected commerce is still largely a domestic affair, with consumers primarily ordering from retailers in their own country, cross-border ecommerce is a growing phenomenon. Shoppers are increasingly looking outside their country’s borders, as more than half of online respondents in the study who made an online purchase in the past six months say they bought from an overseas retailer (57%).

Nearly three-quarters of Indian respondents* who purchased online in the past six months say they bought items from an overseas retailer (74%). But this isn’t just a developing-market trend. Roughly two-thirds of respondents in the Western European countries in the survey say they purchased from an overseas retailer, including 79% in Italy—the highest percentage in the online study—and 73% in Germany....

Jeff Domansky's insight:

Cross-border e-commerce is growing quickly and evolving just as fast. This Nielsen report is a must read for marketers looking at overseas markets.

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Retailers use smartphones technology to upgrade shopping

Retailers use smartphones technology to upgrade shopping | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it

A recent survey by consulting firm Accenture found 63 percent of consumers plan to use a laptop or home computer to make purchases or research items this holiday season, up 16 percentage points from last year.


The smartphone, in particular, is gaining ground. As of August, 174 million people in the U.S. owned one — 72 percent of the mobile market, according to Reston, Va., digital tracking firm comScore. Branding Brand’s research found that mobile devices generated more than half of online retail visits that month, up from 4 percent in 2010.


The digital world generates data even better than sales, so there’s plenty of information on how Americans are using their tech tools.


Accenture’s survey found 24 percent of consumers plan to use a smartphone while shopping, up from 18 percent last year. Almost half of those surveyed are already using or at least would be willing to try services like ApplePay and PayPal that let them use their mobile phone to pay at checkout....

Jeff Domansky's insight:

Attention smartphone shoppers! Mobile is having a big impact on shopping and retailers are responding.

Pierre Schiavon's curator insight, October 28, 2014 12:20 PM

Smartphones technologies are the future !!

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Marketers, You're Thinking About Loyalty Programs All Wrong, And Other Consumer Disconnects

Marketers, You're Thinking About Loyalty Programs All Wrong, And Other Consumer Disconnects | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it

In this study, a survey of 600 digitally savvy consumers and marketers commissioned by Kitewheel, a real-time marketing hub for agencies, 80 percent of consumers said they will search the web, conduct product research, read reviews and compare prices between different retailers at least 75 percent of the time before purchasing.


The fact that the customer journey involves many more touchpoints now isn’t news, but it’s worth repeating because this change is fundamental to how marketers adapt user experiences across all channels....

Jeff Domansky's insight:

Reaching consumers in their search journey to buy products online is a challenge.

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comScore: Expect 16% retail growth over 2014 holidays - Ecommerce

comScore's experts predict desktop ecommerce to reach at least $53 billion while mobile is expected to bring in nearly $8 billion. Overall that indicates a 16% increase in spending over the 2013 holidays. Since Q4 of 2010, ecommerce growth has increased at least 10% Quarter over Quarter.


"The 2014 online holiday shopping season is shaping up to be a bright one with more than $61 billion in spending expected, representing a year-over-year growth rate of 16 percent across desktop, smartphones and tablets," said Gian Fulgoni, Executive Chairman Emeritus of comScore....

Jeff Domansky's insight:

Merry marketing! Retailers should expect significant ecommerce growth over the 2014 holidays. That is the takeaway from a new comScore forecast which predicts the 2014 online holiday spend will exceed $60 billion.

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Why you can’t trust you’re getting the best deal online

Why you can’t trust you’re getting the best deal online | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it

A new study of top e-commerce websites found these practices—called discriminatory pricing or price steering—are much more widespread than was previously understood.


The study, by a team of computer scientists at Northeastern University, tracked searches on 16 popular e-commerce sites. Six of those sites used the pricing techniques; none of the sites alerted consumers to that fact.


Among the study’s findings: Travel-booking sites Cheaptickets and Orbitz charged some users searching hotel rates an average $12 more per night if they weren’t logged into the sites, and Travelocity charged users of Apple Inc.’s iOS mobile operating system $15 less for hotels than other users....

Jeff Domansky's insight:

Are you getting the best price? Research study says maybe not

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