The news: While social media drives discovery, it serves primarily as a path to purchase—not as the final destination.
Platform differentiators: Each major social media network has its own specialty, suggesting consumers’ online shopping strategies aren’t linked to any one platform.
Sticking to the source: While these platforms play a strong role in product research, and can even persuade purchases, rising levels of online crime are causing buyer skepticism. Nearly 60% of consumers worry about scams when buying items directly on social media.
This pushes them to rely on direct sites and trusted marketplaces instead.
After seeing a product online, 31% of consumers head to Amazon or another online marketplace, while 36% go directly on a company website. However, a good deal can assuage those concerns: About one-third (35%) will buy on social media if there’s a discount available.
Building loyalty: Addressing this trust gap is essential for first purchases and for building repeat customers and brand loyalty through social commerce.
After a successful social media shopping experience, 64% of customers will return to a brand. Smooth checkout processes, fast delivery, and responsive customer service play a key role in building that trust.
Our take: The opportunity in social media commerce lies not just in driving discovery, but closing the gap between interest and action.
Brands can earn trust by:
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