Brand loyalty becomes less important to consumers
Marketplaces are now a starting point in 44 percent of all product searches. This is more than twice the number of searches in search engines.
In 44% of all product research, marketplaces like Amazon and eBay are the starting point. They account for the largest share of search, compared to just 19% for search engines themselves. These are findings published in a new report from Inriver, reports Ecommerce News Europe. The survey was conducted with 6.000 consumers across the US, the UK and Germany.
Brand loyalty seems to be less important to consumers, as marketplaces are almost 5 times more likely to be a starting point to research products than a brand’s own website.
Only 14% of respondents said they wouldn’t switch to a competitive product if their first choice was unavailable.
Consistent content necessary
Not only unavailability is a factor here, more than two-thirds (69%) of shoppers decide against buying products with poor descriptions. Up to 83% of shoppers said that product information is an important factor in their purchasing decisions.
At least 45% of those surveyed feel frustrated when they encounter bad product information and 82% of shoppers will look at multiple locations for information on a product. These findings indicate that it is important for online stores to optimize their product information and make sure that this content is consistent across channels.
More Amazon news
Major shutdowns in China due to new COVID outbreaks
Multiple companies in Zhejiang province have suspended operations due to COVID-19 outbreak, halting production of goods from batteries and clothing to textile dyes and plastics. Zhejiang is one of China's biggest and busiest manufacturing hubs. The local government...
Amazon is using sellers as a cash cow
Amazon collects a third of seller revenue A new study claims that Amazon makes far more from fees on its Marketplace platform than even the cash cow known as AWS, reports TechCrunch. According to the report by the Institute for Local Self-Reliance, sellers now give...
Inflation spreads to e-commerce
A recent report by Adobe shows that e-commerce is experiencing many of the same pricing pressures in the broader economy due to supply chain problems, higher shipping and labor costs. Online prices rose 1.9% in October from a year earlier and 0.9% from the previous...