Facebook Shops – Selling on Facebook


Updated to include Shoptab. See below.

It’s been just about 3 weeks since SingleFeed started testing its Facebook application. I’ve fielded a lot of questions about the potential for selling on Facebook and the different options out there for merchants. Now that I’ve delved into the opportunity a bit more, and we have plenty of stores in Alpha, I wanted to give everyone a quick update.

The Potential
With so many consumers on Facebook, merchants have to have a presence on Facebook. It starts with a fan page, but no one really knows where it ends. I view Facebook as an online marketing channel that should be viewed just as one views an affiliate program, seo, ppc, blogging, tweeting, email or shopping engines. Facebook allows merchants to develop a deeper relationship with customers than most of these marketing channels, though, so there’s a little more to it than just thinking like a metrics oriented marketer. Facebook presents an opportunity to interact with Fans of your brand or products. We’ve all been talking about interacting with our customers for years, but with a big ‘ol Wall of posts up front and in your face, more than ever, merchants have an opportunity to listen more and provide shoppers/customers what they want; be it access to designers, special/exclusive offers, meetups, contests, or even a Facebook shopping experience. Facebook also allows for a more viral marketing opportunity.

We’re starting to read about a big splashy Facebook marketing success story every day. Yesterday the NYTimes had a piece about Disney Tickets Together and WSJ had a piece about Merchants Pushing Sales through Social Media. But that said, merchants still have to test, track, and iterate before jumping into the deep end of the social commerce pool. Note that in the WSJ article, Guitar Syndicate doesn’t know if Facebook is actually driving sales and Ski & Sun Sports says that Facebook sales “account for barely 1% of the company’s overall online sales.”

Merchant Options for “Selling” on Facebook
In this post, I’m not talking about adding the Like button to your website or setting up a fanpage. I’m assuming that both of those have happened or will happen (at least as long as the merchant gets to ‘own’ their presence on Facebook). What I’m going to run through are the options I know of for adding some type of shopping experience to a merchant’s Facebook page. There seem to be two schools of thought right now: programs that allow for transacting on Facebook and programs that list products and drive the consumer to transact off of Facebook.

Transacting on Facebook:
Alvenda – made a splash by launching 1800Flowers’ in-Facebook store. Alvenda basically has taken 1800Flowers.com and put it in a Facebook page. Alvenda’s CEO puts it well: “The majority of future online sales will happen offsite. Customers will be able to shop with brands wherever they happen to be on the Web, whether they’re on YouTube, a favorite blogger Web site or in Facebook.” While I don’t completely agree with that comment, the idea is sound. More and more conversations about brands and products are taking place away from a merchant’s site and a merchant need to look at that as an opportunity. Besides 1800Flowers, look at this Brooks Brothers Facebook shopping site. I’ve heard that a Alvenda Facebook Shop can cost $20K.

Fluid Social – made a splash launching a 3-day store for Jones Apparel. Fluid can create Lookbooks and other creative avenues like My Jansport Favorites to help insert the merchant into the conversation. Like Alvenda, Fluid can also cost $20K.

Payvment – Payvment is definitely for the very little guy compared to the market for expensive and flashy solutions from Alvenda and Fluid. The App allows a consumer to quickly and easily view products and add to a cart. The company is getting some good buzz, but looking through the comments for the App, I’m definitely not getting a sense that they are powering anyone of significance and it was strange to go through the comments and find dead end after dead end (comments from merchants who didn’t have the App up and running). The solution can work for a larger retailer, but for now, it looks like they are attracting small Etsy-like stores. Here are some examples: New Hope Beads and Orglamix. Payvment just announced they closed $1.5M in funding, and in the announcement say that “over 20,000 businesses and individuals have started to sell goods on Facebook and over 500,000 Facebook users have shopped for products in stores using the Payvment app.” Please note that it doesn’t say there have been 500,000 sales!

Transacting off of Facebook:
Sortprice: Sortprice was very early out of the gate with their Facebook application and with over 1000 stores up and running, they have to be #1 in terms of real (not tiny little merchants) Facebook stores up and running. Sortprice enables a Facebook presence for any merchant that works with them for their shopping engine program for FREE. Here are some examples: TigerDirect and Evogear.

Wishpot: Wishpot is a bit of a mystery to me. They offer social commerce solutions for merchants, but they seem to be concentrating more on basic wishlists for consumers. The look and feel of a Wishpot Facebook stores is great, definitely better than Sortprice and Payvment Facebook Shops, but you’re going to have to pay. Looking like Teavana or C&C California is going to cost you a couple thousand dollars. Wishpot is also sending merchant offers to Twitter.

Shoptab: I don’t know anything about these guys and haven’t hear much about them, but I like the idea that the founders are store owners, or so the website says. According to their LinkedIn profiles, Jay Feitlinger and Bret Giles both seems to have good internet marketing and ecommerce experience. They set up a support portal through Zendesk, but it hasn’t been updated since late last year. Not sure if this is a side business. The Shoptab blog is a bit more active and the App page is full of comments. Shoptab costs $10, $15, or $20/mo depending on SKU count. Example stores: The Reptile King, Wholesome Productions, and the Coca-Cola Store. Paul Cheney from Practical eCommerce wrote about Shoptab last week.

SingleFeed: We’re Alpha testing our solution. It’s free and takes 5 mins to set up, which seems to be much different than most of the other solutions available. It’s based on the Google Merchant Center data feed, which almost all serious merchants have at this point, and runs off of Google App Engine. The feedback we’ve gotten so far is all about customization. Merchants want to be able to feature Sale products, Special offers, one-day Sales, etc. We’ll have our Beta out in a week or 2.

There are other solutions for setting up a Facebook shop, but these are the players I think are serious. There are many shopping carts and ecommerce platforms (Big Commerce, Cartfly, etc.) that allow merchants to sell their products directly on Facebook, but if you’re a merchant, please don’t make a decision on an ecommerce platform based on this one feature.

I’m not the first to report on this. Make sure to read Inc.’s coverage from April.

5 Responses to Facebook Shops – Selling on Facebook

  1. Matt says:

    Good comparison, and good luck with your beta!
    As I spent quite some time researching and studying the social commerce space I’d like to add a few comments…
    a) I believe that merchandising/selling on platforms like Facebook needs to aim at max accessibility to the shop/products, and Alvenda is clearly not doing that… take the 1800Flowers implementation: you have to ‘like’ the page before you can interact with the Shop tab and even when you do so you have to give permission to an app to access your information. Now, to me that is 2 steps that should be avoided. Anyway, they’re not alone in asking the user to install an app and honestly I don’t see any extra benefits in that.
    b) I’m an early user of Wishpot and the confusion may be that they started as a wishlist/registry site for consumers and then evolved into the social commerce / B2B space. If you look at the website it’s mostly their consumer proposition, while I believe that the social commerce services are essentially external implementations (such as your examples).
    c) call me a skeptic (or maybe just sane) but I believe that Sortprice isn’t anywhere near 1000 active shops (just check the brands they say have installed their Facebook Store… I could barely find any with their shop, actually they’re mentioning brands that have a FB Shop indeed, but provided by a competitor) as well as I don’t believe the numbers disclosed by Payvment… 20,000 businesses and individuals have started to sell goods on Facebook, really?? Come on…

    To close on a more positive note, I can’t wait for brands like H&M to start doing something serious with social commerce… well, in their case it’s creating a damn transactional website (it’s about time I guess!) and offer their 2M+ Facebook followers to interact with their products and do cool stuff around them.

  2. Hi Brian,

    thank you for the coverage and for including Wishpot. We have been focusing on our retailer offering for quite sometime now. We provide the Wishpot platform to many retailers and we power now more than 150 premium retailers. We have not announced yet many of the new retailers but we have some amazing brands coming up.

    As for the pricing it really depends. We provide our platform but often also a bit of services to help our retailers to get started with some social media or to optimize the shopping experience I can tell you that many retailers get started for way less than what you mention in the article.

    I know you focused this article on Facebook, but our platform is a bit more comprehensive as it allows to power other networks as well. For example if a retailers wants a “Twitter outlet” our platform will completely automate it.

    Hope to see you next week at IRCE and we can catch up. I will stop by the booth and can show you some of the upcoming stuff!

  3. Ariel Wada says:

    We just launched not to long ago. The CommerceSocial social sales suite is now added to the growing mix of Facebook shopping apps, and is the leader :)

    Our software is a full suite of social commerce tools under the brand CommerceSocial — a scalable suite of social commerce tools, such as portable, full featured stores with built-in checkout that can be instantly deployed on Facebook Pages and profiles (example store: http://www.facebook.com/pages/Runway-Pilot/135347753165951?v=app_4949752878) where each product Wall share also has a built-in checkout for in-Wall checkout and allow for immediate viral propagation off the Facebook site to any site the sharer wants to share it on (built-in affiliate-like commissions help push this sharing). All accounts are $0 start up and $0 ongoing fees, CommerceSocial tools charge a small fee upon sales trans. All merchant products sold through their unlimited stores on unlimited sites license are also made available for social publishers to endorse directly inside their professional or user-generated content for additional sales channel – text, videos, and now YouTube viral videos are supported for in-content product endorsements.

    http://www.facebook.com/commercesocial
    http://www.commercesocial.com

    ALSO :: All merchants looking for Facebook shopping solutions should also be aware of the NEW Facebook Tab stucture Facebook is deploying in less than 2 weeks. Any store wider than 520 pixels (it appears most are) is going to have design and usability issues. More info found here: http://developers.facebook.com/blog/post/399

    Thankfully our people came across that article early on. Our CommerceSocial Suite of tools works perfectly with this new format.

    Thanks for the forum.

    Ariel Wada
    CEO, Pure Verticals

  4. Lucas Watson says:

    facebook marketing will be dead soon coz facebook is craking markerters on the FB network;”,

  5. Hendrik Maat says:

    Hi,

    Our ShopShare is in all languages, the website will be in english end of this week. We see ourselves as the professional Shop fo rtaking on big customers, we even provide clusters for massive numbers of products.

    On our demoshop you can most of the features, liking, sharing and reviewing are the most promising.

    We have or build interfaces to all webshopsystems and accounting programs, so no extra work is neccesary for updating stock or products.

    We are now working on a voucher system so that shops can give out vouchers only valid in the facebookshop to motivate people to use the facebookshop.

    I would love to see you mentioning our system, after all, we are allready speakin gto some of the biggest players in Europe, including Amazon Germany!

    Regards,

    Hendrik Maat
    ShopShare

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