Tick Tock, Tick Tock
Ever since the social media era took off, people have been trying to figure out how to shop on it. While we can arguably say that the mid-1990s classmates.com was the first social site, most analysts prefer to trim the period a few years to include Friendster (2002), Myspace (2003), and Facebook (2004). Those are the three pillars on which everything we know today is built.
It took until 2009, though, before 1-800-Flowers became the first company to use their Page as an online shopping portal. They were followed soon by JC Penney. Alas, neither did very well, because they basically viewed their Page as a secondary website, and all they did was display products like they would on their own site.
Companies and social media sites then went into a major funk for a decade, trying to figure out how to do s-commerce effectively. But by 2020, in the middle of a pandemic, the pieces started to fall into place. Facebook Shops was launched, with companion versions on Instagram, WhatsApp, and Messenger. It took a while, but an under-baked idea was suddenly ready for Prime Time.
Now rival TikTok has raised the bar once more. It partnered with Shopify last year as a third-party turnkey solution for individuals and businesses trying to sell on its platform, and has launched TikTok Shop in Indonesia and the UK. And hereâs the latest: they are advertising for professionals to build order fulfillment centers from the ground up in the US.
This can only mean one thing: TikTok wants a piece of Amazon. What a surprising turn of events, because for the last few years, it has been about all the others trying to duplicate TikTokâs success, and social couldnât have cared less about Amazon. Until now.
It remains to be seen exactly what TikTok plans to sell, but warehouses mean storage and order fulfillment, not offices. This is huge, and already has the wheels turning in my head, because if they could also take on other capabilitiesâlike print-on-demand of photographic artwork, I would be standing in line tomorrow. Or this afternoon.
The idea is to more perfectly integrate e-commerce into the social platform. I have a hard time wrapping my mind around smaller sellers bringing their inventory to a TikTok warehouse in Seattle, though. But anything that could be produced on-demand would work perfectly, from books to wall hangings.
I realize that Amazon already warehouses other peoplesâ inventory, and fulfills their orders. There is always the task of getting said inventory to Amazon, though, which can be problematic, unless the seller has its merchandise shipped directly to an Amazon warehouse.âšâšOf course, larger sellers could overcome this issue a lot more easily. Itâs the sole proprietors I am thinking about, the folks who truly need turnkey solutions so they do not have to hold massive amounts of inventory, and also be able to oversee their business from anywhere as long as they have internet access.
I am aware of one art print company that provides a total solution, but it is still separated from the social graph. This leaves it to the artist to help steer traffic away from a social page to the art page, and then hope no one falls through the cracks. But to be able to do it all within the social platform? Priceless.
TikTok is apparently limiting this foray to just a Seattle location for now, which, ironically, is where Amazon started. I suspect this will be rolled out nationally in short order.
The academic in me sees lots of good things happening here. By offering e-commerce, it will enhance the stickiness of its site. It will keep us around longer. It also has the potential to be viral, because people can easily share a store with their friends. And when people come together, whether in the physical space or virtual, it can become magnetic. It reinforces itself.
Better yet, TikTok has landed on another revenue stream, because itâs not just going to do all of this for nothing. Whereas Facebook and Instagram stores are free to set up, I am certain that sellers will hit paywalls at every turn. Unless those paywalls arenât too high, it will still be worth it to have the reach that TikTok provides. You could never do this on your own.
Yes, Iâve got my eyes on you, TikTok. We might just have a relationship in our future. I want to sell my art photos, but I do not have time to do much more than shooting and editing the photos. I do not want to spend my evenings packing boxes and running to UPS the next morning.
This. This could be the future of s-commerce. Wait for it.
Dr âLetâs Get This Party Startedâ Gerlich
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