TikTok tests feature to make every post shoppable as social media giant moves to create multibillion-dollar e-commerce business

Date:

Share:



TikTok is testing a feature that could make all posts shoppable, the social media company’s latest move to create a multibillion-dollar US e-commerce business.

The new feature uses technology to identify objects in a video automatically. Then it encourages viewers to “find similar items on TikTok Shop” by clicking into a page of products, according to screenshots and posts viewed on the app by Bloomberg. Previously, only approved influencers and brands could tag products when they posted content to the app.

A TikTok spokesperson confirmed the feature is an early test.

The Chinese social-media company last year launched the US version of TikTok Shop — an effort to combine the ease of shopping on Amazon.com Inc. with the product discovery afforded by social-media sites like Instagram. The new business is a top priority for TikTok, which aims to sell $17.5 billion worth of goods in the US this year, people familiar with the matter said earlier this month.

The launch of Shop so far has received mixed reviews. Merchants interviewed by Bloomberg in December applauded the app, having seen record sales for their small businesses through the first holiday season as TikTok bankrolled discounts and free shipping for shoppers. In November, which included Black Friday and Cyber Monday, more than 5 million new customers bought something, the company has said.

But users have complained about counterfeit and knockoff products sold on TikTok’s marketplace. Some also say the preponderance of ad-like posts from influencers is wrecking the experience.

TikTok offers content creators commissions on product purchases made from their posts, giving them an incentive to push the merchandise. The new feature being tested links to products on regular users’ posts without the hard sell, potentially making the experience more palatable for visitors just looking to be entertained.  

So far, the items being surfaced by in the test aren’t always a perfect match. For example, a video reviewed by Bloomberg from a woman who polishes stones served up a gold ring and two sets of metallic press-on fingernails tagged with “similar to item in video.” 

Subscribe to the Eye on AI newsletter to stay abreast of how AI is shaping the future of business. Sign up for free.



Source link

Subscribe to our magazine

━ more like this

Young British men are NEETs—not in employment, education, or training—more than women

The number of young British men who are neither in work nor preparing for the world of work is at its highest in...

Flappy Bird’s original creator says he has nothing to do with the new game

Last week, The Flappy Bird Foundation announced a game called Flappy Bird. But while the group has been framing it as the triumphant...

VCs backing Kamala Harris are ‘trying to buy the right type of risk’

Being a venture capitalist carries a lot of prestige in Silicon Valley. Those who choose which startups to fund see themselves as fostering...

SpaceX capsule returns to Earth after historic spacewalk that went higher than ISS, Hubble

A billionaire spacewalker returned to Earth with his crew on Sunday, ending a five-day trip that lifted them higher than anyone has traveled since NASA’s...

The great Evernote reboot

For so many years, the Evernote elephant was a truly iconic logo. Evernote was one of the first productivity apps to embrace smartphones,...