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Our forthcoming events

Hello and welcome to the second newsletter of the year. With the holidays well and truly behind us, it's time to look forward to our upcoming events.

On Thursday 4th February you will find the Ecommerce Club in Glasgow for the Ecommerce Club Working Lunch Glasgow: E-Marketplaces for another informative lunch with our founding partners at the Scottish Enterprise head office. 

There are dozens of internet marketplaces which provide a quick way to set up shop and sell online. But which sites are worth your time? How can you identify those marketplaces that provide the right positioning and support for your brand at a cost you can afford?  And don't forget the question of how much insight into your business and its customer base are you willing to give away. What are the potential upsides, and the big question - do these offset potential downsides?Understand the market, from the big players like eBay, Google and Amazon to the smaller marketplaces which are popping up all the time. Choosing the right marketplace could be a critical strategic move. Please register here.

The Ecommerce Club will be back in London on Thursday 25th February with 
Ecommerce Club Working Lunch: In 2016 it’s all about the customer. The event will be taking place at ATTRQAT’s base in the heart of London. At this lunch you will be able to network, share your experiences, valuable information and learnings with your peers. You will also hear from ecommerce expert Chloë Thomas. Across her career, Chloë has seen many businesses that have struggled to get to grips with ecommerce. In response, she crafted the “eCommerce MasterPlan” to help companies plan, develop and grow a successful ecommerce business, whilst avoiding the potential pitfalls along the way.
Please register here.


We would also like to extend an invitation to retailers, B2B and B2C brands to attend Salmon’s Commerce 2020: Helping to Shape your Digital Strategy which takes place on Tuesday 23rd February at the fabulous 30 Euston Square, London, NW1 2FB from 10am until 2pm, with lunch provided.

At this morning event, receive expert tips on how to develop and shape your digital strategy with industry-leading analysis and practical insight on a number of key topics:  from the role of digital technology in driving growth for your business and what key trends will impact digital commerce by 2020. We will also look at how successful businesses are planning for a digital future and the latest pioneering technology and their impact on your sector such as, wearables, with a chance to take an up-close look. You will hear from a great line-up of speakers including: David Rowan, Editor-in-Chief, Wired – Neil Stewart, CEO, Salmon – Martin Gill, Principle Analyst, Forrester Research – Simon Forster, Executive Director, Selfridges.
To find out more or register here

 

We look forward to seeing you soon

 

All the best


Miss Charlie Lines
Director and Co-founder
Mixing Digital


 


Up Periscope: The rise of live streaming
With the likes of Meerkat, Periscope and even Facebook offering mobile broadcast tools, live streaming will become more popular in the year ahead, according to new data.

Currently, it’s only tiny minorities of consumers who are using live-streaming apps; according to GWI’s data, about 1.5% globally are engaging with Meerkat and just under 2% are using Periscope. Numbers remain low in all of the 34 markets surveyed and, while both apps have seen growth in recent quarters, it’s hardly the type of dramatic increase that might have been expected given the high-profile coverage that they have been receiving.


Currently, it’s only tiny minorities of consumers who are using live-streaming apps; according to GWI’s data, about 1.5% globally are engaging with Meerkat and just under 2% are using Periscope. Numbers remain low in all of the 34 markets we survey and, while both apps have seen growth in recent quarters, it’s hardly the type of dramatic increase that we might expect given the high-profile coverage that they have been receiving.

Dig a little deeper, though, and the potential of these apps is not hard to see. Firstly, watching a video consistently ranks among the top activities on sites like Facebook and Twitter.
Secondly, the arrival of ad-blocking on mobile means that native advertising will become more important in terms of engaging consumers.

Look specifically at young mobile users and 40% of them say they are watching native forms of video on their smartphone more frequently than they were a year ago. And their preferences when it comes to live broadcasts offer fertile ground for brands. Most popular of all are broadcasts of funny/entertaining content, which over half of mobile users aged 16-34 say they are interested in watching. Following behind are live broadcasts of breaking news stories on just over 40% and music concerts on 38%. Smaller but still important groups express interest in watching videos broadcast by brands (26%), celebrities (21%) or vloggers (19%).

It’s among these audiences in particular that brands could hope to carve out an important presence on smartphones despite the inevitable rise of mobile ad-blockers. Meerkat and Periscope might be highly niche names at the moment, but not for long.

Black Friday and Cyber Monday Generating £1.1 Billion in Online Sales: Where Did We See the Real Performance?
Another year of Black Friday and Cyber Monday sales have hit Britain’s shores
Another year of Black Friday and Cyber Monday sales have hit Britain’s shores.  Amid speculation about a cooling towards the popular American shopping holiday, due to rowdy behaviour and chaos in retails stores, statistics seem to tell a different story. While shopping centre parking lots seemed to be empty on November 27th, the Internet was the real hero of the day seeing massive sales through the channel. Total online sales on Black Friday hit £1.1 billion up 3.6% from last year according to Experian.

Another year of Black Friday and Cyber Monday sales have hit Britain’s shores.  Amid speculation about a cooling towards the popular American shopping holiday, due to rowdy behaviour and chaos in retails stores, statistics seem to tell a different story. While shopping centre parking lots seemed to be empty on November 27th, the Internet was the real hero of the day seeing massive sales through the channel. Total online sales on Black Friday hit £1.1 billion up 3.6% from last year according to Experian.

It doesn’t come as much of a surprise to us that Black Friday has become heavily focused on online consumer purchases within the UK. Firstly, many consumers don’t want to deal with crowded shops, lack of parking and even risking the product not being in stock especially when many of the same deals are available online, and secondly unlike its American counterpart the UK’s Black Friday holiday falls on a normal working day.

NMP takes a look at how our brands performed online over the Cyber Weekend, and where we really saw the spikes in performance.

eTail West 2016 Conference

According to Forrester’s Julie Ask, 2016 will be the most consequential year for companies on the path to customer obsession, and that includes adapting to empowered customers who expect to get anything they want immediately, in context on their mobile devices.

Today that represents nearly 50 per cent of consumers in the U.S. alone. The consumers pick up their mobile devices 150 to 200 times a day. In aggregate, that adds up to nearly 30 billion mobile moments each day. These mobile moments are the next battleground where companies will win, serve and retain their customers. Tragically, few companies will make the leap. Those that do will reap the rewards.

What role does mobile play in customer obsession, and how can businesses leapfrog their competition to deliver superior customer experiences? Here are three ways Forrester predicts mobile will change the ways business leaders operate in 2016.

  1. Mobile will act as a catalyst to transform businesses in the Age of the Customer

Mobile is the tail that wags the dog that is digital business transformation. Mobile is changing the way businesses have to operate and serve customers. It is the central force in the Age of the Customer.

In 2016, the gap between customer-obsessed leaders who will embrace mobile as a means to create new value and laggards who consider mobile to be a stand-alone channel will widen. Today just 14 per cent of companies surveyed use mobile to try to transform their customers’ experiences.

Most companies will fail to create the business case for the tens if not hundreds of millions in spend they need to transform how they engage with consumers. Simple use cases from Apple Pay to Starbucks order-head to mobile boarding passes for airline flights may seem like simple apps, but the execution no doubt cost tens of millions and took years if not longer.  Those companies that do embrace mobile as a means to transform customer experiences will accelerate the business benefits they reap in the form of new revenue, cost savings and consumer loyalty derived from higher satisfaction and delight.

  1. Ownership of mobile moments will continue to consolidate

Facebook, Google, Apple and Amazon in the US and Baidu, Tencent, Xiaomi and Alibaba in China are aggressively building, buying and amassing the audience and data or information about consumers they need to dominate consumer mindshare on mobile devices. This trend will continue in 2016. Retailers, banks and travel apps collectively garner less than 10-15 per cent of mobile moments as measured in minutes.

Consumers will download and use branded apps where they shop and bank, but consumers do not have unlimited bandwidth to hop in and out of lots of individual apps to get stuff done. Already today in the US, consumers spend 84 per cent of their time each month in five or fewer apps.

Third parties like Google and Facebook will extract content and services from third party apps and use context to reassemble them into streamlined task flows and curated content that offers unprecedented convenience to consumers. Consumer brands must look to partner with mobile leaders to serve their customers in addition to supporting their own apps.

  1. Need for mobile automation will fuel massive technology investments

Thirty billion mobile moments each day in the US demands a technology that can help businesses automate how they engage with consumers. In exchange for sharing vast amounts of information with companies via accounts, purchases and mobile apps, consumers expect companies to use that context to deliver relevant services and content.

Unlike the web however that offers all things to all people, mobile serves individuals with just want they want in their moment of need. Where the web is static, mobile is dynamic and depends on context. Companies lack the talent and tools today to ingest information, develop insights, make decisions about how to serve customers and take action in real time. They will depend on technology and experts who understand mobile well to do so.

Vendors who help companies automate and master serving their customers in their mobile moments will elevate their valuations and attractiveness to larger enterprise solutions targeting CMOs. In 2016, marketing tech vendors will find themselves at an arms race to provide not just automation, but machine learning to derive insights from big data and campaign optimization. They will focus on improving data management capabilities and predictive algorithms.

In the end, a majority of firms will struggle to cope with growing mobile expectations from customers and will simply think of mobile as channel to optimize their conversion rates. However, CMOs and CIOs at companies that do incorporate mobile into their overall strategy will cooperate to execute cross channel integration of mobile across the customer life-cycle and to prioritize the integration of mobile with backend systems. This will allow them to evolve their culture, organizations and process to leapfrog competition.

Source: Forrester

Future Events

Promotional Product Expo (20th January)


FutrGen London (14th - 15th January)

Ecommerce Club Working Lunch: Generation Commerce (28th January)


The Delivery Conference (2nd February)


Ecommerce Club Working Lunch in Glasgow: E-Marketplaces
 (4th February)


IMRG Fashion Connect Conference (12th February)


eTail West 2016 Conference (22nd -25th February)


Ecommerce Club Working Lunch: In 2016 it’s all about the customer (25th February)



 

 

 

eTail West 2016 Conference
Consumer expectations to drive mobile: report
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