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Online shopping likely to reach $1.2 trillion by 2025: Accenture

06 Jan '22
4 min read
Pic: Raquelsfranca | Dreamstime.com
Pic: Raquelsfranca | Dreamstime.com

A new study by Accenture has found that the $492 billion global social commerce industry is expected to grow three times as fast as traditional e-commerce to $1.2 trillion by 2025. The growth is predicted to be driven primarily by Gen Z and millennial social media users, accounting for 62 per cent of global social commerce spend by 2025.

According to Accenture’s report, 'Why Shopping’s Set for a Social Revolution', social commerce means a person’s entire shopping experience — from product discovery to the check-out process — takes place on a social media platform. Just under two thirds (64 per cent) of social media users surveyed said they made a social commerce purchase in the last year, which Accenture estimates to reflect nearly 2 billion social buyers globally.

“The pandemic showed how much people use social platforms as the entry point for everything they do online — news, entertainment and communication.” said Robin Murdoch, global software and platforms industry lead at Accenture. “The steady rise in time spent on social media reflects how essential these platforms are in our daily life. They’re reshaping how people buy and sell, which provides platforms and brands with new opportunities for user experiences and revenue streams.”

While the opportunity is significant for large businesses, individuals and smaller brands also stand to benefit. More than half (59 per cent) of social buyers surveyed said they are more likely to support small and medium-sized businesses through social commerce than when shopping through ecommerce websites. Furthermore, 63 per cent said they are more likely to buy from the same seller again, showing the benefits of social commerce in building loyalty and driving repeat purchases, Accenture said in its report.

“Social commerce is a levelling force that is driven by the creativity, ingenuity and power of people. It empowers smaller brands and individuals and makes big brands reevaluate their relevance for a marketplace of millions of individuals,” said Oliver Wright, global consumer goods and services lead at Accenture. “Getting social commerce right will require creators, resellers and brands to bring their products and services where the consumer is, and will be, rather than the other way around. It means working together within a dynamic ecosystem of platforms, marketplaces, social media and influencers to share data, insights and capabilities to deliver the right incentives and best consumer experience across an integrated digital marketplace.”

Half of social media users surveyed, however, indicate they are concerned that social commerce purchases will not be protected or refunded properly, making trust the biggest barrier to adoption, as it was for e-commerce at its beginning.

“Those who have yet to use social commerce say one reason they are held back is their lack of trust in the authenticity of social sellers, while active social commerce users point to poor policies on returns, refunds and exchanges as an area for improvement,” said Wright. “Trust is an issue that will take time to overcome, but the sellers who focus on these areas will be better positioned to grow market share.”

Accenture’s report found that by 2025 the highest number of social commerce purchases globally are expected in clothing (18 per cent of all social commerce by 2025), consumer electronics (13 per cent) and home décor (7 per cent). Fresh food and snack items also represent a large product category (13 per cent) although sales are nearly exclusive to China. Beauty and personal care, although smaller in terms of total social commerce sales, is predicted to quickly gain ground on e-commerce and capture over 40 per cent of digital spend on average for this category in key markets by 2025.

Fibre2Fashion News Desk (RR)

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