Ecommerce & Logistics

How Much E-Commerce is Generated From a Desktop?

Here was a surprise revelation to wake up to this morning. An article by Shawn Lim on The Drum screams out how the Desktop trumps mobile when consumers make big purchases on e-commerce platforms in Singapore. With all the trends of shopping on the go and mobile apps making purchases faster than the speed of thought, the desktop trend growing was quite the surprise. But when you think about it, it makes sense: for most people, ‘second nature purchases’ take place with a cell phone because indepth research isn’t needed. For the bigger ticket items, people will still want to research, review and compare before clicking on the shopping cart. Not to mention the perception that desktops are ‘more secure’. All this and more according to a new study released by Singapore-based e-commerce platform ShopBack who found 60% of its consumers ‘practise’ omnichannel shopping on its mobile and online platforms.

Here’s Shawn’s article from The Drum:

While mobile applications’ immense growth in traffic and purchase volume has eclipsed that of desktops in the e-commerce space in the Asia Pacific, the latter remains relevant in the region, especially for larger transactions.

A large part of desktops’ relevancy can be traced to innovations like browser extensions because it adds convenience to users’ shopping journey. Consumers also generally perceived desktops to be safer, therefore turn to their desktops when making large purchases.

This is according to a new study released by Singapore-based e-commerce platform ShopBack, which commissioned the study after it found 60% of its consumers ‘practise’ omnichannel shopping on its mobile and online platforms. The company defined this as beginning their browsing journey on mobile and finally transacting on desktop, as they ‘feel safer’ to pay on desktop.

The platform suggests this could be due to a manifestation of the prevalent perception gap in terms of cybersecurity among users and that desktops’ larger screen size allows for more information and content to be displayed in a multitude of ways, as a typical desktop can provide at least three times more information compared to a smartphone.

This means consumers turn to desktop when they require more information for in-depth research and product comparison when making purchasing decisions for products such as general and personal insurance or travel bookings. “With the e-commerce space revving up for the year-end shopping season, it is now opportune for marketers to strategise where they should concentrate their firepower to maximise their returns on marketing,” said Candice Ong, chief commercial officer at ShopBack.

“As the organiser of ShopFest for over 1,500 e-retailers in seven countries, we at ShopBack want to facilitate a better understanding of the landscape so that industry players can market more effectively based on the latest findings we gleaned from our proprietary database that covers a wide spectrum of lifestyle categories marketed online.”

“While the rise of mobile is undeniable, we found that desktop still preserves its relevancy in the e-commerce space – especially in countries where internet is served first on desktops before mobile. We feel that it’s important for us to share this finding with other marketers so that all platforms are properly optimised.”

The company has released the full findings from its research here.

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