Nov 4, 2020
The leaves have fallen, pumpkins are cooked, and votes are cast. Winter is definitely coming, and so is the year’s biggest shopping season. October saw enormous quarterly results for the big tech firms - a net profit of $38 billion between the big four. Influencers are really taking to the online shopfronts of Instagram and other platforms. We are also starting to see ecommerce ramping up for Black Friday and the holiday season, with many new lockdowns around the world creating more difficulties for retail stores, especially those selling toys.
Independent bookshops in the US have found a way to group together and compete (to some degree) with Amazon, with the launch of bookshop.org. Claimed by some as a revolutionary moment, the site accelerated its plans to launch in the UK, to be ready in time for Christmas. Have a look at our own overview of how the publishing industry has been faring in the digital age.
One big bit of news this month was Google’s new update for Google Analytics (dubbed 4), which should help marketers get even more accurate data. New elements for the platform include AI-powered insights and predictions, deeper audience integrations with Google Ads, customer lifecycle-framed reporting, They also give an indication of how they anticipate ways in which machine learning will help deal with the cookie-less future, a topic we will be keeping an eye on here at DMI.
A global pandemic, during which millions of people were staying at home, was clearly the ideal time to launch a how-to YouTube channel. In early April, Rob Kenny, a 50-something father of teens, videoed himself imparting practical advice on simple household tasks. The very first video couldn’t have been simpler - How to Tie a Tie. The YouTube channel he created, Dad how do I? was quickly shared beyond his family and by June it had amassed over 2 million subscribers and he has started joining up with retailers. A real home-hewn success.
The undeniable business success story of 2020 is Amazon, the truly global marketplace. As well as reaching the one-million employee mark, they have opened their first bricks-and-mortar store in North Carolina, Their ongoing march through the world of commerce doesn’t always go smoothly. Hoping to simplify the online shopping experience for Swedish residents and gather together more local merchants, Amazon launched a Swedish-language version of the site. It quickly received a lot of bad press for its poor translation (clearly based on machine translation and not correct localization). Products are being listed with many offensive or unclear words, and somehow the Argentinian flag was placed on the site, rather than the Swedish one.
Unless you’ve been living in a cave (which would be quite understandable), you’ll have heard about the oddly-timed news from Kim Kardashian of her island getaway with friends to celebrate her 40th birthday. Here are some of the highlights tweeted by others with their own island “celebrations”.
On a more positive note, Twitter proved an undeniably effective tool for England footballer Marcus Rashford who essentially launched a one-man campaign to source free meals for British schoolchildren during the October mid-term school holiday, after the government failed to act.