Ecommerce livestreaming booms in the time of quarantine

The coronavirus pandemic has forced companies to adopt new tactics to reach consumers staying at home, including selling on third-party platforms and boosting livestream marketing.

Chinaโ€™s ecommerce market reached $1.9 trillionย in 2019, according to eMarketer. This includes direct-to-consumer sales from companies, but many consumer brands sell more via third-party platforms that have enormous existing user bases. Even luxury brands like Prada, once fearful of the internet, have recently signed deals with Tmall, Alibabaโ€™s B2C online marketplace, to boost sales, as consumers shy from shopping in person amid virus concerns. ย Connecting to potential customersย through ecommerce platforms like Taobao is no longer enough, however, as consumers expect interactive forms of entertainment during their shopping experience, like livestreaming.

Ecommerce livestreaming is a $62 billion industryย in China, and growing fast. In 2020, iMedia Research projects the industry will exceed $128.5 billion, per the Peopleโ€™s Daily, which also notes that on Alibabaโ€™s platform Taobao Live, โ€œthe number of livestreaming rooms launched by retailers on the platform increased 719 percent month-on-month in February.โ€

Is ecommerce livestreaming here to stay? Yes, according to some analysts,ย who say new consumer habits will outlast the COVID-19 pandemic.

โ€”Caroline Stetson