Alibaba Group generates $7B GMV in two hours, with 84pc garnered via mobile
By
November 14, 2016
As a part of its Global Shopping Festival, Alibaba celebrated a massive boon of over $7 billion gross merchandise volume (GMV), all settled through its Alipay payment platform.
The news comes on the heels of news that HTC is expanding the scope of its Vive virtual reality platform with the debut of a virtual Alibaba store. The two developments evince a stalwart dedication to mcommerce on the part of the Chinese retail giant, which is attempting to expand its reach outside of national boundaries into Amazon’s territory.
Global Shopping FestivalAlibab’s Global Shopping Festival, which is held on November 11, began in 2009 with participation from just 27 merchants as an event for Tmall.com merchants and consumers to raise awareness of the value in online shopping. Since then, it has become a global event with participating merchants in the tens of thousands, buyers in the millions, total sales in the billions and celebrity appearances from the likes of Kobe Bryant, David Beckham and Scarlett Johansson.
When the event kicked off at 12am China time, the ensuing highlights included a glut of sales settled through Alipay exceeding $1 billion in the first five minutes, with the number growing to $5.2 billion within the hour and $7.2 billion in two hours.
And, in a stunning turn for even an online retail company, Alibaba reported that 84 percent of GMV was settled through Alipay’s mobile client, indicative of a lightning-quick shift to mobile shopping with both customers of Alibaba and the Chinese consumer at-large.
Alibaba has also partnered with HTC to release Buy+, a mobile app geared towads use with VR-compatible smartphones that allows users to view and buy products in virtual stores. HTC claims that it is the first mass-demonstration of a “complete VR shopping experience.”
Mobile retailIt should be no surprise to know that Alibaba considers this year’s Global Shopping Festival to be a massive success, in part due to the event’s progress over time: Chinese consumers ended up purchasing more in the first hour of this year’s Global Shopping Festival than in 24 hours in 2013. Alipay’s increased availability through greater mobile uptake no doubt played a large role.
The event as a whole is conspicuously Chinese in character, and is evidence of the cultural ramifications of China’s hyperkinetic economy. The elevation of living standards across the country has come hand in hand with a pervasiveness of consumer culture that ratifies the ethos of events such as the Global Shopping Festival.
No comments:
Post a Comment