If you’ve ever shopped for a product online, chances are you’ve browsed more than one marketplace. Very few people shop exclusively on eBay, Walmart, Jet.com, Sears.com, Newegg, or even Amazon. Most consumers are searching the best deal available, and will spend a few extra minutes comparison-shopping between marketplaces to find it.
So why do so many e-commerce companies continue to do business just on Amazon or another single sales channel? Why aren’t more sellers using multi marketplace listing software to reach shoppers everywhere they possibly can?
When it comes to looking for a product, 56% of consumers go to Amazon first. Amazon has captured more than half of initial product search traffic—once again proving its status as the linchpin of the e-commerce industry, right?
Not so fast. Before your e-commerce company constructs a sales strategy on top of a single factoid, check out a few more things the same data show:
If you look beyond the headlines, you can see the plethora of opportunities available to sellers who take a multichannel or omnichannel approach to online retail. Indeed, the numbers sellers should be paying attention to are the double- and triple-digit growth rates of companies that have expanded into multiple marketplaces.
With that in mind, here’s what you need to know about using multi marketplace listing software to quickly, easily, and effectively supercharge your multichannel growth.
A channel is any place you sell your products. Channels can be online or offline. Examples of channels include Amazon, eBay, your web store, shopping carts on social media sites (e.g. Facebook and Instagram), as well as any physical, brick-and-mortar retail locations you may operate.
Marketplaces are where sellers compete for consumer attention (i.e. by winning the “Buy Box”). Amazon, eBay, Walmart, Etsy, Rakuten, Newegg, Google Shopping, and Sears are all examples of marketplaces.
When we use the term “marketplace,” we’re referring to e-commerce sites on which third-party vendors can sell products directly to consumers. Websites belonging to brands such as Wayfair, Target, and Best Buy are sales channels for those companies, but are not considered e-commerce marketplaces—because they aren’t open to third parties. So, if you sell on Walmart, and your own web store, you’re active on three channels, two of which are marketplaces.
Multi marketplace listing software is what sellers use to manage their presences on multiple marketplaces.
This kind of solution is also referred to as “multichannel listing” or “multichannel e-commerce” software, or really any combination of “multi-,” “channel,” “listing,” or “e-commerce” with “software,” “solution,” or “platform.” Basically, it’s the set of tools you use to coordinate and synchronize sales of the same products across various marketplaces, without losing your mind or wasting hours of every day manually creating and updating listings, adjusting prices, and fulfilling orders.
Every multi marketplace listing solution is different. That said, most follow a similar process:
Just as there are channels outside of Amazon, there’s more than one multi marketplace listing solution out there. E-commerce businesses should take the time to research, try out, and compare different software platforms.
How do you know which is the right solution for your company?
Ask the following questions:
Here at SellerActive, we’ve made it easy to find the answers to those questions. Learn about our capabilities, our integrations, our pricing.