M&S targets youth market with major move into live shopping
With its turnaround firmly on track, M&S
Thought to be a first for a major UK retailer, M&S has launched a live shopping service from today (Friday) that will use influencers to model pieces over a live video stream.
The service, facilitated by M&S software partner LiSA, allows any of the 13.5 million customers that visit M&S.com each week to join a live broadcast. Hosted by an M&S expert, they can hear more about the ranges they’re browsing, ask questions through the live chat function, view product demonstrations, and importantly, buy the products as they watch.
M&S said it hoped to make the service “more relevant, more often” with shoppers. And the new feature will be key in promoting its widening stable of fashion brands, which now includes HobbsJoulesPhase EightWhite Stuff
Following three “successful” trial events, the first broadcast (Lingerie, Women’s, Kidswear, and Activewear) took place Friday at 12.30.
M&S’s entry into the live shopping space is part of a wider plan to sell more clothes online and attract younger shoppers after its reported success selling fashion during the Christmas period. The move is also expected to attract more visits to its website.
Stephen Langford, director of M&S, said: “Live Shopping on M&S.com is the latest in a wave of new initiatives we’ve introduced to improve our customer experience. It’s a global trend that responds to how customers are using social media – we all know how much more we’re scrolling and engaging with video content – at home, or on the go.”
He added: “Live shopping puts our experts front and centre and gives them the ideal platform to share the M&S point of difference – in terms of both quality, design and innovation features.”
While livestream shopping is still in its infancy in the UK, the format is projected to be worth $480 billion in China this year, according eMarketer, and $11 billion in the US, according to Foresight Research.
However, with tech giants Facebook, AmazonTwitterPinterestMcKinsey
In the UK, live shopping took off on TikTok late last year with retailers using it to sell Black Friday deals by connecting with the social media app’s mostly teenage audience.