#Double11 2016 Singles Day Record Proves China’s E-Commerce Might

singles-day-2.jpg
Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba Group has tallied more than US$1 billion in the first five minutes and US$5 billion in transactions in the first hour of its annual Singles Day sales blitz. That means China’s 2016 Singles Day shopping fest—aka Shuangshiyi or Double Eleven, since it takes place each November 11—retains its title as the world’s biggest online shopping event.

The final sales tally for the 24 hour global shopping spree: US$17.8 billion in GMV (gross merchandise volume) sales, or in China’s yuan or renminbi currency, RMB 120.7 billion. The vast majority (82%) of that shopping frenzy took place on mobile phones and devices, with $14.6 billion (RMB 98.97 billion) on mobile.

Last year, Alibaba’s digital shopping platforms racked up a total US$14.3 billion in sales, bypassing the $9.3 billion in #Double11 Singles Day sales in 2014 — meaning the 24-hour shopping spree has almost doubled in two years.

It’s also a proof point for Ant Financial Services Group, Alibaba’s fintech arm that operates its Alipay mobile payments platform. “The excitement around online shopping continues to build year after year, and it’s emblematic of the way that e-commerce is changing, giving consumers incredible access to products around the world,” said Ant Financial SVP Douglas Feagin to the South China Morning Post.

Ant Financial this year says it processed 1.05 billion transactions, an increase of 48 per cent from last year. At the peak of the madcap shopping within the first hour, as many as 120,000 transactions per second were processed, Feagin said. Ant brought innovation and speed to the online sales crush. Just as importantly, it helped finance merchants and consumers alike.

As SCMP reports, “Before the start of the so-called Singles’ Day shopping gala on November 11, Ant Financial’s MYbank unit granted over 50 billion yuan of loans to 1.33 million merchants to help them put their products online.Ant Financial’s Ant Credit Pay was also on hand to grant more than 100 million customers credit to finance their online shopping, Feagin said.”

At the half-way mark, it was clear that 2016’s event would surpass last year’s record, according to Alizila’s coverage:

At the 12 hour, 29 minute mark of the sale, total GMV had exceeded RMB 82.4 billion ($12 billion), with mobile accounting for 83.55 percent of the total.  Alibaba Group President Michael Evans had this to say: “With roughly 11 hours to go, we’re in a good place.” More than 14,000 international brands are participating in the sale, he said, and sales from international brands have so far accounted for about 30 percent of total GMV.

Alibaba #Double11 Singles Day sale

Virtual reality also played a role this year, with Tmall’s Buy+ billed as the world’s first virtual reality shopping experience. For the price of a 15 cent cardboard VR headset, shoppers could slip their smartphone into the headset and browse products from handbags to shoes to lingerie, and even have virtual models showcase the apparel and accessories on a catwalk.

Shoppers could browse eight digital stores using VR to assess the goods before buying them. Participating retailers include Macy’s, Target, Costco, P&G, Chemist Warehouse, Freedom Foods, Tokyo Otaku Mode and Matsumoto, part of the over 11,000 international brands that join in the fair.

The global online shopping event also introduced interactive games and partnerships with over one million brick-and-mortar shops, including a Pokemon Go-like mobile application to catch the Tmall cat mascot in offline locations of Tmall merchants in shopping malls to spur foot traffic to the merchants. In return, consumers can earn special prizes such as free subscriptions to Alibaba’s Youku TV.

It also teased this year’s 11.11 with teasers including an eight-hour live-streamed “see now buy now” fashion show from Shanghai, where consumers can order anything they see on the catwalk in real time from brands including Victoria’s Secret.

The goal of this technology is to “improve [the] consumer retail experience, I would say you’re looking at the future of retail. The future of retail is in China, not anywhere else,” Alibaba Group’s co-founder and vice chairman Joseph Tsai told a media briefing on Thursday in Shenzhen, China.

Leading the 11.11 international sales brigade this year were merchants from the US, Japan, South Korea, Australia and Germany. Most countries have already exceeded the volume of sales recorded for the entire sale last year.

It’s another astonishing Singles Day,  an annual promotion inviting consumers who are not in relationships to cheer up with some retail therapy — an anti-Valentine’s Day “treat yourself” event invented by Alibaba’s Tmall head, Daniel Zhang, in 2009 to rival America’s Black Friday and Cyber Monday shopping events, and now surpasses both of them combined.

While 11.11 started with discounts, it has morphed into an event featuring global brands such as Apple and luxury brands such as Burberry and Maserati, which both operate branded Tmall stores.

As Teng Bingsheng, Associate Professor of Strategy at the Cheung Kong Graduate School of Business (CKGSB) in Beijing, stated in a pre-event press release, “To some extent, people remember that Alibaba initiated the 11.11 shopping festival. However, other brands are quickly gaining their fair share as well. But as long as the whole pie – and Alibaba’s own business – both get bigger, it’s still good news.”

CKGSB Associate Professor of Accounting Zhang Weining added, “Double Eleven used to last for 24 hours, but this year it will stretch for 24 days. I think Alibaba foresaw that the sales growth rate would slow down this year, in part because more and more e-commerce platforms are running these campaigns and consumers are increasingly attracted to promotions offered prior to the day itself. This new strategy will also ease the pressure on delivery logistics, since sales will be more spread out.”

Jack Ma Kobe Bryant Alibaba Singles Day 11.11Chairman Jack Ma—who welcomed David and Victoria Beckham and Kobe Bryant (while Katy Perry dropped out for a family emergency) as ambassadors for this year’s event at its countdown gala—said Alibaba’s cloud computing system is “[by] far the most advanced that human beings can realize.”

Last year, the company processed 140,000 transactions per second via its cloud arm Aliyun during the shopping peak, while payment arm Alipay processed an additional 86,000 transactions per second at peak sale time.

 

The company reportedly plans to list in 2017 in either Shanghai or Hong Kong, making it China’s largest IPO since 2010 when the state-owned Agriculture Bank of China offered $22.1 billion worth of shares.

Brand partners were also vocal about what propelled Single’s Day sales this year: mobile (as Gap attested), personalization (such as Oreo) and virtual reality:

For its part, Walmart kicked off its Black Friday sales event today, along with Target, in a bid to attract shoppers in the mood for deals. Both retailers’ official in-store Black Friday sales begin at 6 p.m. on Thanksgiving, reprising last year’s schedule despite murmurings that consumer interest in deal blitzing on Turkey-day may be waning.

While Office Depot and Mall of America announced they’ll be closed on Thanksgiving, Macy’s, Kohl’s and Toys R Us are joining Walmart and Target. Walmart will be “dramatically increasing” inventory to offer nearly 50 percent more Black Friday merchandise this year online than last year.

Walmart US CMO Steve Bratspies said that “We really pride ourselves on not being the retailer who advertises a great price but then only has a few available for the customers.”

Walmart deals include a Samsung 50-inch 4K television for $398 and movies that cost $1.99. Target is touting deals like an iPad Air 2 for $274 and 30 percent off apparel and the giant teddy bear for $10 that hijacked social media last year is back with 20 percent more bears!

Both big-boxers will start with offers over the next two weeks seeding the way for customer engagement as holiday spirit.

Target returns to its “10 days of deals” program, touting a single big promotion daily starting the weekend before Thanksgiving, while Walmart is offering limited-time Black Friday discounts and holding further price cuts for into December.

Still, some rang a cautionary note about Alibaba’s sales reporting, as the BBC reported: “Some have questioned the accuracy of the numbers, amid claims of inflated sales data at online retailers across China. Merchants passing off counterfeit goods as genuine is also an industry problem. Alibaba reported 85% of purchases had been made on mobile phones during Singles Day.”


About Retail News Asia

Retail News Asia is committed to providing local and global retailers with the latest news from the Asian retail market on a daily basis.

We have resources for everyone from independently owned business owners to online-only retailers and major chains expanding their reach throughout the Asian market. Retail News is “the news source” with over 50 weekly posts and 13,6 million readers.


CONTACT US

CALL US ANYTIME

Most read



Retail updates

Stay up to date of the lates updates and retail news from Asia.








X