Reflections & analysis about innovation, technology, startups, investing, healthcare, and more .... with a focus on Minnesota, Land of 10,000 Lakes. Blogging continuously since 2005.

Category: E-Commerce (Page 2 of 2)

Explore the World of Ecommerce Best Practices, Technology, and Trends in Minneapolis Sept 27

Irish Titan has announced its fourth annual Ecomm Forum conference to be held at the Aria event  center in downtown Minneapolis on Thursday, September 27, 2018.  The event, which attracted 300+ last year, will feature a host of great speakers, panelists, and sponsors. Registration begins at 1:00 pm, and  the event closes with a reception that wraps up at 7:00 pm (See a schedule here, which will be updated as the date gets closer.)

If you are involved in any way in ecommerce (who isn’t?), you should get yourself there. Tickets are only $30-40, right here on Eventbrite.

Ecomm Forum 2017 wide shot

The scene at last year’s Ecomm Forum.

Sponsors include many established players in the ecomm space, including DotMailer, ShopifyPlus, Magento, Big Commerce, Vertex, Avalara, Akeneo, Emarsys, and Siteimprove.

Darin Lynch

Darin Lynch, Founder, Irish Titan

IrishTitan, an ecommerce and digital strategy agency, has come  a long way since Darin Lynch launched it in 2004. I love what he’s built, the branding, the tagline (“Business First, Online Second”), the culture, the team. They have a ton of fun, support the community with sponsorships of their own, and the make the list of ‘Best Places to Work’ over and over again. Clients include Haskell’s, ApplianceSmart, Bank Cherokee, Fidelity Bank, Funky Chunky, Harbinger Partners, Heartland Equity Partners, National Camera Exchange, Rave Sports, The Patchery, and more.

Kudos to you, Darin, and the staff who puts such a great conference together!

Retailers Are Lagging, Says Omnichannel Leader

[Note: This post first appeared on April 30th at Minnov8.com, where I’m a regular contributor.]

SPScommerce-Influence-logoRetailers still don’t appear to be facing the profound changes their industry is undergoing, according to Peter Zaballos, VP of marketing and product at Minneapolis-based SPS Commerce, in a keynote he gave yesterday at the company’s annual “omnichannel” conference, called In:fluence15.

“It’s not just about ‘the Amazon effect’,” he said. “It’s about digital engagement.”

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Is #Fcommerce Inherently F***ed? A Recent Media Report Suggests So, But a Minnesota Startup Begs to Differ

F-incart_(c)WeeverMediaI read recently an analyst’s prediction that social commerce — of which Facebook commerce is a subset — would be a $5 billion business by 2015.  Does that sound big to you?  It didn’t to me — not considering that  Forrester says online retail overall will be $279 billion by 2015.

While I was mulling these numbers, I happened to delve into the blog of Sucharita Mulpuru, a VP at Forrester and a well known ebusiness analyst.  I discovered she’s been a longtime bear on F-commerce. Then I saw a sharply worded story pop up yesterday morning, first in a Shop.org newsletter I receive. It was based on a Bloomberg story: “Retailers Shut Facebook Storefronts Amid Apathy.”  What one might call the money quote the reporter ended her story with: ‘

“I give so-called F-commerce an ‘F’ ”

It was a quote attributed to Wade Gerten, CEO of 8thBridge, a Minneapolis-based social-commerce technology firm. Fcommerce-ShopDotOrg

The story ended abruptly with that quote — leaving me hungering for more. But I didn’t have to wait long, because last night a quick-comeback rebuttal to the story suddenly appeared on Forbes.com. It was a guest post from that very same Wade Gerten, entitled “Facebook Shopping Apathy? Smart Plays On F-Commerce.”  His company, 8thBridge, was a much-heralded startup here in 2009 that hitched its wagon to Facebook commerce, and soon after raised $15 million in two rounds of venture capital. Turns out he and his team had a wild day, he told me, pulling together that post to counter the Bloomberg piece.  A key excerpt from the post is the conclusion:

“Tomorrow’s online shopping experience will look very different than the product catalog-specific experience we have today. The rich intent data available via the Open Graph will enable brands to usher in a new era of ecommerce that is shaped by people and around people.

This is the most exciting innovation to hit e-commerce since its birth in the Nineties! Most of the brands working in this space are anything but apathetic.”

8thBridge-logoGerten also talks in the post about his firm’s recent partnership with TicketMaster. It was one month ago today that 8thBridge announced it had launched an app that people could add to their Facebook Timeline to share their plans to attend concerts, their actual attendance at a concert, and share ticket buying with their friends. They noted people could purchase tickets within the app without leaving Facebook.

On its web site, 8thBridge claims that more than 50 leading brands in fashion, retail, and entertainment have launched social commerce initiatives with its technology — some of those other brands being Delta Air Lines, Oscar de la Renta, Electronic Arts, and Avon.  The site doesn’t say how many of these “initiatives” may have been of the “storefront” variety that the Bloomberg story says are being closed — nor, of course, does it name which of its clients had (or still may have) such storefronts. But I think it’s fair to say the Open Graph initiatives are what 8thBridge is now very much concentrating on.

As you might imagine, 8thBridge is not the only company defending F-commerce.  Here’s another link, also on Bloomberg, which appeared prior to the recent dustup (it’s a video interview): “Payvment CEO Sees ‘Huge Business’ on Facebook.”  But note this guy is also hedging his bets — spreading his risk if you will, naming both Twitter and Google+ as other platforms where his firm can make money from its technology.

On top of all this recent uproar about Facebook commerce is the absolute juggernaut that is Pinterest! Pinterest-logoI’ve gone on record on the past two weekly Minnov8 Gang podcasts as saying this site will be a huge disruptor in social commerce.  But that’s the topic of another blog post — actually, countless hundreds that will no doubt be appearing soon everywhere!  (By the way, please follow me here on Pinterest:  www.pinterest.com/graemethickins.)

What future do you see for Facebook commerce?  Or for social commerce in general?  Please comment!

(Facebook logo-cart image copyright Weever Media.)

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