All Wrapped Up
Transcription
All Wrapped Up
White Paper All Wrapped Up 2015 Christmas Holiday Shopping Recap Table of Contents: Anatomy of the Season A Quick Start to the Season Mobile Momentum Carries the Season Shopping Carts: The Omnichannel Companion Incentivizing Shoppers Key Takeaways from the Season This report uncovers holiday shopping behavior based on the activity of hundreds of millions of shoppers during the 2015 Christmas Holiday shopping season in Canada, France, Germany, the United States and the United Kingdom. 2015 was the year that digital swept retail. Thanks to a fast start to the season, shoppers placed 28% more orders globally during the 2015 Christmas Holiday shopping season. In contrast to reports of flat to low in-store sales, digital commerce enjoyed strong traffic growth of 23%, especially on those traditional in-store shopping days. Anatomy of the Shopping Season FREE Shipping Highest Day 2014 2015 Cyber Monday 11/30 88% 53% Last year, it was 30% larger. Cyber Monday 8.8% 12/24, 25, 26 - over 50% Cyber Monday: 17% larger than Black Friday this Year 10.3% 47% Black Friday 40% ORDER SHARE BY DAY 25 Highest Traffic Share % on Christmas 53 Phone fic Share Phone Traf 80% of Orders Wed. 12/16 5.0% 4.5% 4.0 % Tues Nov. 24th Tues Dec. 1st 24% Tues Dec. 8th Tues Dec. 15th Canada France Germany UK 15%USA 14% 39% 39% 10% 20% 32% 28% Tues Dec. 22nd 16% 13% Global DISCOUNT RATE DISCOUNT RATE FREE Shipping Rate Peak 11/26-11/30 This season features an additional day between American Thanksgiving and Christmas. Thus, the last day featured above reflects a comparison of Boxing Day 2015 compared with the day after Boxing Day in 2014. ORDER GROWTH, BY REGION 39% 39% 10% All Wrapped Up 20% 32% 28% 2 Growth continued after the peak week, though at a slower pace. The week-by-week season view lends some credibility to a point that many analysts posited – that some sectors within retail, like apparel, may have been restrained by unseasonably warm weather across North America, as typical winter purchases like outerwear may not have been top of mind for shoppers. Even though order growth slowed in the two weeks immediately following Cyber Week, it ticked up slightly when Christmas and Boxing Day drew near, as shoppers made last minute orders. ORDER GROWTH, YEAR OVER YEAR, BY WEEK 39% 12% 18% 25% 19% Cyber Week Post-Peak Period Mid-Season Period Pre-Christmas Period Christmas Boxing Week * The extra day between American Thanksgiving and Christmas is NOT reflected in the week-by-week view. The additional day accounts for a roughly 3% increase to the aggregate season’s orders, globally. A Quick Start to the Season The big Black Friday shopping storyline was not about raucous crowds or busy parking lots, but about shoppers choosing their own adventure and shopping on their own terms online. Black Friday orders were up 53% from 2014, as shoppers placed 6 times the number of orders compared to a typical non-peak Friday. The quick start of the season continued into Cyber Monday, where orders increased 38% year over year. All told, orders were up 39% over the seven days of Cyber Week, revealing not one big shopping day, but a full week of shopping. The Cyber Monday peak was only 17% higher than Black Friday this year, down from 30% the year before. These two days combined represented 50% of the first week’s orders, up from 46% in 2014 and 44% in 2013. Most strikingly, 38% of all holiday shopping orders were placed during Cyber Week, up from 34% from the prior year. The biggest shopping week just got bigger as shoppers pulled the season earlier. ORDER GROWTH, CYBER WEEK (TUESDAY THROUGH CYBER MONDAY), BY REGION 46% 54% 22% 20% 47% 39% Shoppers exhibited perhaps the most interesting behavior in the days immediately leading up to Black Friday and Cyber Monday, where visit growth was higher than the two peak days. In fact, Cyber Week visit growth was lowest on Black Friday and Cyber Monday (compared to the same days YoY). Then conversion rates jumped on the two peak days, up 27% on Black Friday and 12% on Cyber Monday. Shoppers prepare by browsing and even carting prior to the peak shopping days. Then when retailers reveal their best offers, shoppers take action and buy. All Wrapped Up 3 PEAK SHOPPING WEEK: TOTAL ORDER SHARE BY DAY Wed. 2015 Wed. 2014 Thurs. Thurs. Wed. 2013 Black Friday Black Friday Thurs. Black Friday Sun. 23% Sat. 21% Sat. Sun. 19% Sat. Sun. Cyber Monday Cyber Monday Cyber Monday Tues. 27% Tues. 25% Tues. 25% Mobile Momentum Carries the Season In 2015, phones shifted the shopping arena. Shoppers are no longer tethered to a physical location; they now shop anywhere and everywhere. For the first time, phone traffic was highest when it mattered most, as share reached 49% on Cyber Saturday and 46% on Black Friday. The biggest mobile days happened at the end of the season, as phone traffic share climbed over 50% on 3 consecutive days: 50% on Christmas Eve, 53% on Christmas Day and 53% on Boxing Day. Phones weren’t just browsing tools in 2015. Phone order share reached all-time highs this year, claiming 29% of orders on Thursday (American Thanksgiving), 33% on Christmas Day and 32% on Boxing Day. The biggest days also saw more action on phones, as 26% of Black Friday and 22% of Cyber Monday orders came from phones. In total, phones accounted for 24% of orders and 44% of traffic during the season, up from 16% and 34% the previous year. PHONE SHARE, BY REGION Traffic Orders 46% 40% 39% 44% 43% 38% 32% 23% 21% 17% Canada France 24% 19% Germany UK USA Global The spike in mobile orders was due certainly to higher traffic levels, but conversion rates from phones increased significantly this year as well. Cyber Monday mobile conversion was up 27%, peaking late in the evening at 10pm. Shoppers holding phones late in the evening are most likely to buy. And while mobile has soared, tablets have continued to falter. Tablet traffic share dwindled to 10% on Cyber Monday and 11% on Black Friday. Across the entire season, tablet share fell to 11% of visits and 14% of orders, down from 14% and 16% the previous year. Tablets are being crowded out. All Wrapped Up 4 Shopping Carts: The Omnichannel Companion The cart not only shows shopping intent, it also serves as the shopper’s wish list. Thanks 46% to the rise of mobile, 44%carts have become 43% the omnichannel40% utility, providing immediate access 38% to saved products wherever the shopper goes, including the store. This 39% year, shoppers created 31% more baskets and there was a 6% increase in the add-to-cart rate, which paved the way for digital commerce order growth. 32% The eve of the two peak season shopping days (the day before Black Friday and the day before Cyber 24% Monday) saw the biggest 23% basket growth, underlining the pre-shopping phenomenon previously mentioned. Carts were more and more mobile this year; the 19% 17% number of carts created on phones doubled and basket rates on phones soared to 25%. In fact, mobile accounted for 77% of cart growth in the 2015 shopping season. INCREASE IN CARTS CREATED, BY REGION On Mobile Overall 200% 180% 196% 160% 140% 120% 100% 108% 80% 60% 86% 85% 63% 54% 40% 20% 101% 31% 13% Canada France Germany 9% UK 37% USA 31% Global Incentivizing Shoppers Shoppers continue to seek out and receive free shipping. This year, 76% of all orders shipped for free, up from 74% during last year’s peak. On Cyber Monday, 88% of orders shipped for free, surpassing last year’s rate of 83%. There should no longer be boardroom debates about free shipping, particularly on peak shopping days. Free shipping is a shopper expectation. Known for deep discounts, the peak shopping season demonstrated discounting in line with recent trends, up nominally year over year from 17% to 19% and indexing about 25% higher than a non-peak period. Interestingly, post-Cyber Week discounts were down compared to last year, with discount levels mimicking non-peak levels once Cyber Week had passed. Post-Cyber Week, the rate of discounting and free shipping was equal or lower to that of the previous year. With the fast start to the season, retailers may have curbed their promotions for the remainder of the season. All Wrapped Up 5 Key Takeaways from the Season 1 Shoppers Value Peace of Mind 2 Shopper-First Means Mobile-First 3 Cart Power Shoppers proved that they are eager This sounds like old news, but far too Two massive trends are shaping retail: to shop early in the season, yet patient many have not taken drastic enough the rise of mobile and online-to-offline enough to wait and determine whether measures to be best on mobile. With (O2O shopping). Shopping carts sit at the deal they found is the best. Retailers mobile traffic passing 50% share on the center of these trends, as the mobile beware: don’t burn early shoppers a number of occasions, retailers must shopper carries the cart with them with better deals late in the season, think shopper-first by being mobile-first. wherever they go – in store and on the as the practice of delayed discounting Retailers should use faster network move. Retailers should ensure the cart can alienate shoppers. Instead, savvy speeds and bigger screens to their persists and position it as the shopper’s retailers will clearly communicate offers advantage by exposing more brand wish list. Further, providing access as ‘best’ throughout Cyber Week, imagery and products on the home to the cart from marketing channels, allowing shoppers to buy immediately page. Retailers should also clearly including email and display, will drive with the peace of mind they have the display key utilities like site search and traffic right back to the cart and ultimately best offer when they are ready to buy. the shopping cart. Product detail pages to conversion. Finally, using email as Additionally, retailers should use a sense can also accommodate alternate views a cross-device intermediary can help of urgency to encourage immediate as well as conversion optimizers like recognize shoppers as they transition purchase, noting potential low stock reviews and user-generated content. from phone to computer. levels or limited-availability products. Shrunken desktop screens and boring accordion navigations are no longer acceptable; mobile is the primary way that shoppers experience a brand. All Wrapped Up 6 About This Report This report provides a snapshot of digital commerce metrics, focusing on the busy Christmas Holiday shopping season. Demandware sourced data for this report from live digital commerce sites transacting on the Demandware Commerce Cloud during this and last year’s holiday periods, across Canada, France, Germany, the United Kingdom and the United States. Time of day has been normalized to the shopper’s local time. Discount rate is calculated as the discount on merchandise purchased and does not include items already on markdown. All Wrapped Up and these reported values are not indicative of the operational performance of Demandware or its reported financial metrics, including GMV growth and comparable GMV growth. For the analysis, we identified the unique periods that occur before and within the season. Those periods are defined as: Shopping Season: Tuesday November 24th to Saturday December 26th Mid-Season Period: Tuesday December 8th to Monday December 14th Cyber Week: Tuesday November 24th to Monday November 30th Pre-Christmas Period: Tuesday December 15th to Monday December 21st Post-Peak Period: Tuesday December 1st to Monday December 7th Christmas and Boxing Day Period: Tuesday December 22nd to Saturday December 26th About Demandware Demandware, the category defining leader of enterprise cloud commerce solutions, empowers the world’s leading retailers to continuously innovate in our complex, consumer-driven world. The Demandware open cloud platform provides unique benefits including seamless innovation, the LINK ecosystem of integrated best-of-breed partners, and community insight to optimize customer experiences. These advantages enable Demandware customers to lead their markets and grow faster. 5 Wall Street Burlington, MA 01803 linkedin.com/company/demandware facebook.com/demandware +1 (781) 425 1400 twitter.com/demandware demandware.com youtube.com/user/demandware info@demandware.com pinterest.com/demandware © 2016 Demandware, Inc. This document contains archival information which should not be considered current and may no longer be accurate. Approved for unlimited distribution.