Thursday, December 24, 2020

How the festive shopping season can help merchants re-imagine e-commerce

By Andrew Torre 
Andrew Torre, Visa’s regional president for Central Europe, Middle East and Africa.

This year’s holiday shopping season has taken considerably greater global significance with retailers of all sizes, sectors and geographies seeking a welcome boost during this uniquely challenging year. 

Optimism abounds that festive spending can remedy some of the painful declines that merchants experienced during lockdowns, while providing a barometer of confidence as we enter the new year.

While most bricks-and-mortar stores across Central Europe, Middle East and Africa have felt the impact of restrictions this year, eCommerce momentum continues.

Visa recently published the COVID-19 CEMEA Impact Tracker highlighting the effect the coronavirus pandemic has had on commerce for consumers and small merchants in Kenya. Kenyans started shopping online for the first time for essentials. 39 per cent of consumers surveyed say that COVID-19 has led to their first online grocery purchase, while 43 per cent have made their first online purchase from pharmacies. Overall, the report points to a shift towards online commerce, with cash transactions replaced by digital payments. Immediately following earlier lockdowns, we saw a similarly consistent move online in many geographies, from Moscow to Maputo, and Lahore to Lagos.

As consumers stayed home and merchants remained shuttered, online became not just a convenient way to shop, but often the only way.  These behaviors have since persisted. More people are now shopping online, and those who already had experience with ecommerce were buying a larger range of goods and services online. This presents enormous opportunity for merchants looking to engage with consumers. It also marks the start of a new era of eCommerce, where a merchant’s speed of response to changing consumer behaviors is ever more essential. 

Payment experiences remain at the heart of this evolution. Having an online presence isn’t enough. Consumers rightly expect speed, safety and convenience in how they pay and that experience is a key driver for whether they will stay and return.

Some of the defining features for this renewed period of online opportunity include first and foremost the desire by shoppers to have the right experience on their first try. Necessity brought many people online, but the quality of experience will keep them there. Recent research showed 81 per cent of people are willing to pay more for a positive shopping experience, whereas 67 per cent who abandoned their online cart never make the intended purchase. With so many people now online, we need to make those visits flawless - from finding products to frictionless payments. 

Second, delivery opens new doors. Retailers need to ensure delivery and fulfilment is as seamless as the point of order. Cash-on-delivery is fast being replaced by contact-free options driven by consumer and employee demand for hygiene and convenience.  This is an area of great innovation with new mobile and online payment solutions – from card-on-file to using smartphones as payment terminals - offering improved, more personalized and faster online and real-life experiences for shoppers.

Third, the Buy Now Pay Later (BNPL) model is growing in significance. Meeting consumer expectations for new flexible ways to both pay and finance purchases is essential in a post-recovery world. Instalments are growing in popularity, giving consumers the option to divide total purchase amounts into smaller payments without fee, alleviating the stress of larger purchases, and helping retailers expand sales and grow revenue and loyalty. 

Fourth, there is a shift to social commerce online marketplaces that offer fast and convenient platforms for small merchants to quickly and effectively reach consumers on the social media platforms where they already are.  Facebook, Instagram, Google and other platforms provide new online services and opportunities to embrace social commerce, meaning it has never been easier for merchants to come to consumers, rather than expecting consumers to find them.

Lastly, consumers will fast abandon purchases if a familiar, trusted payment method isn’t available or they don’t feel secure.  Merchants need to respond to how consumers want to pay by adding payment options such as cards and “pay” buttons.  Services like Visa’s Click to Pay remove the hassle of entering payment details for each transaction, while tokenization and secure remote commerce are increasing security and reducing friction, replacing sometimes cumbersome checkout forms.

While 2020 has been an incomparably difficult year, it is also one which has shed light on clear future opportunities for merchants of all sizes. Moves to digital payments we would typically see over a number of years have accelerated into a few short months, and many of these behaviours are here to stay.  While more merchants than ever have an online presence, it will be those who are first-movers and who remain in-step with changing consumer demands that will remain best placed to reap the greatest rewards, and emerge even stronger from the disruption and complexity.

The writer, Andrew Torre is Visa’s regional president for Central Europe, Middle East and Africa. 

 

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