Jul
19
2010
0

The More The Merrier: When Commerce Goes Social



Social media are built on our human need to share information. That includes personal information such as what we’re doing, where we are, who we’re with and (increasingly) what we buy. Now, companies and consumers are grabbing hold of social commerce, but are both parties fully taking advantage of it?

Social bargain-hunting service Groupon is currently operating in 52 cities. Its website boasts users have saved almost $300 million through Groupon’s featured deals. The average deal price on the site has steadily increased from about $25 in November 2009 to $45 in April. More markets are opening their doors to social commerce, and droves of consumers are flocking to the idea.

How social commerce works




On Groupon, if a predetermined number of people purchase the discounted coupon each of them get the product or service at a discounted rate. In the very rare instance that the deal fails to reach the predetermined number of purchases, everyone’s transaction is cancelled and no one gets the deal.



With a similar service, Living Social, users get discounts if they convince their friends to buy the featured products and services. These services are giving companies and consumers the power to leverage online sharing, creating win-win situations in the process.

BUT that’s not all…

What if companies decide to hand over other promotional activities to the social realm? All signs point to the social commerce trend’s continued success, so why not take social sharing past one-time discount coupons?

Purchase-sharing site Blippy lets users broadcast what they buy to their social networks and spark conversations around those purchases. Some people see Blippy as a huge invasion of privacy, but that may be because outside of the conversations, Blippy doesn’t offer any incentive for users to share. That’s where merchants have an opportunity to step in. They need to give their customers incentive to share their location and/or purchases. That incentive can come in many different forms other than pre-purchase discounts as with LivingSocial and Groupon.

Consider the following possibilities:

  • An electronics store gives customers more points on its loyalty program for Tweeting purchases automatically.
  • A ticket vendor offers free parking for an event to a user who posts his football ticket purchase to Facebook.
  • An apparel company with an exclusive product testing club for its most frequent customers gives those customers more freebies to try if they blog or post pictures of the clothing on social networks.

The average Facebook user has 130 friends. So each piece of content shared on the site has potential for a 130x multiplier effect. TypePad just released a study that proved Facebook Like widgets increase blog traffic by 50%. Imagine if the same increase was applied to products or services. And that’s only Facebook. Add that influence to email contacts, Twitter followers, LinkedIn connections, Foursquare friends and other social groups. We’re talking about huge opportunities for vendors to let their marketing run rampant through their customers’ networks.

Want to talk more about social commerce and some of the goodies we’re working on at a&g? Drop us a tweet (@schneidermike or @EricLeist), leave us a comment, or contact us here.

Jul
07
2010
0

I’m Eric Leist & I’m an Emerging Technology Strategist & Amateur Chef & High School Speech Coach



When I was 14 years old, I was skinny, awkward and curious. (That much of me has pretty much stayed the same.) During my first week of high school a new friend asked if I wanted to go to an after school meeting about the speech team. “Lame,” I thought. But I went anyway because I was 14 years old and didn’t know how to say, “no” to new friends. Two and a half years later, I was standing on some stage somewhere in Chicago receiving some recognition as the National Champion because some judges apparently thought I was a decent competitive public speaker. Just like that, a communicator was born.

Ever since then, I have been helping people communicate—most of the time without realizing it. That meant editing friends’ term papers and being the “presentation guy” in group projects in college. It means volunteering time as a speech coach at a local high school. It meant choosing Public Relations as a major at Boston University (despite the fact that I was initially inspired by the movie Anchorman to pursue Broadcast Journalism).

So that’s where I am now. Fresh out of college and working hard in the areas of communication I see people needing the most help: new media and technology. It’s all moving so quickly & I love helping people keep up.

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