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Making Money with Shoppable Live Streaming

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Manage episode 334130676 series 2652590
Content provided by Will Laurenson. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Will Laurenson or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

Key highlights:

01:05 - 10:11 - Why Shoppable Live Streaming? - The money being made in Asia through shoppable live streaming is insane, really insane amounts. While that might not translate across to the West, the fact that Amazon is doing it, there’s QVC, and Sarah is having great success should tell you there’s an opportunity here.

Maybe during covid and lockdown was a better time to start as shops were closed so consumers were forced to shop online, but for those brands purely online, a shoppable live stream allows you to connect with consumers, and give them a good in-store experience, online. While you can’t touch the products yourself, the consumer gets the ability to ask very specific questions to the expert, ask their opinion on it and get a far more detailed response than a quick text description.

10:20 - 17:11 - What are the Challenges with Shoppable Live Streams? - It can get overwhelming. The examples you see of it are super high production value. The likes of Amazon or QVC for example. They’ve got multiple cameras, directors, producers, professional lighting, audio etc. But really, you can do it on a phone. Most social platforms offer the function, you’ve got live stream functions via tools such as Restream.

But outside of the technical stuff, you’ve also got to decide what the point is going to be. Is it going to be a sales channel for you, is it a community engagement piece? Whats the strategy, and are you going to commit to it?

17:40 - 23:33 - How does Shoppable Live Streaming Differ from UGC? - Ideally, if youre going to connect with your audience and your consumers, you should know the brand insight and out, you should have expert level knowledge of your products. Its OK to request some information during the stream if you can’t answer something, but really you should know everything. If you use an influencer, you need to be aware that they’re not going to engage your audience so much, because they don’t know how to.

23:44 - 27:43 - Top Tips for Shoppable Live Streams - Dive in, give it a go. Send an email out to your list or post it on social announcing that youre doing it, and that will commit you to giving it a go. If you have a founder that can do it thats perfect, otherwise you can use a sales rep, product developer, anyone really who has really good knowledge of the brand and products, and is comfortable doing a stream. Something that I think makes it slightly easier is that there will be a chat function there, so you do feel you’re speaking to people, rather than just at a screen hoping someone is watching.

Your streams should ideally drive sales, engage the community, create content for you, and provide education to your audience.

27:52 - 42:40 - Big Mistakes to Avoid - Getting a celebrity or influencer to do the stream. It sounds fun, it sounds like it’ll draw the audience in, but then they won’t be able to engage them so well. You need to at least pair them with someone from the brand. Another mistakes is not committing to it properly. Once a month wont get you anywhere. You need to do at least once per week for 6 months to build the program, develop and optimise it. You need to learn what your audience likes, what themes work, what content they want.

42:41 - 50:55 - How to Constantly Improve? - Having a feedback loop is essential, both from your team and your audience. Make your own notes, you’ll know a few things happened that you liked or didnt like. Consider getting a coach to help you with your style, the way you present, and of course, keep ontop of the sector. Make sure you know what consumers want, how they want to engage, and the types of content that are working.

51:08 - Who Would Sarah Like to Take For Lunch in the D2C Marketing World?

Some of the producers and programmers at QVC, whats their secret sauce?

51:58 - Sarah’s Must-Have Tools:

  • A simple LED light works better than a ring light for her
  • A tripod for your camera
  • Potentially broadcast software if you’re using a DSLR


If you’d like to hear more from Sarah, you can connect with her on LinkedIn or head over to https://sarahwilliams.tv/

  continue reading

218 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 334130676 series 2652590
Content provided by Will Laurenson. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Will Laurenson or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

Key highlights:

01:05 - 10:11 - Why Shoppable Live Streaming? - The money being made in Asia through shoppable live streaming is insane, really insane amounts. While that might not translate across to the West, the fact that Amazon is doing it, there’s QVC, and Sarah is having great success should tell you there’s an opportunity here.

Maybe during covid and lockdown was a better time to start as shops were closed so consumers were forced to shop online, but for those brands purely online, a shoppable live stream allows you to connect with consumers, and give them a good in-store experience, online. While you can’t touch the products yourself, the consumer gets the ability to ask very specific questions to the expert, ask their opinion on it and get a far more detailed response than a quick text description.

10:20 - 17:11 - What are the Challenges with Shoppable Live Streams? - It can get overwhelming. The examples you see of it are super high production value. The likes of Amazon or QVC for example. They’ve got multiple cameras, directors, producers, professional lighting, audio etc. But really, you can do it on a phone. Most social platforms offer the function, you’ve got live stream functions via tools such as Restream.

But outside of the technical stuff, you’ve also got to decide what the point is going to be. Is it going to be a sales channel for you, is it a community engagement piece? Whats the strategy, and are you going to commit to it?

17:40 - 23:33 - How does Shoppable Live Streaming Differ from UGC? - Ideally, if youre going to connect with your audience and your consumers, you should know the brand insight and out, you should have expert level knowledge of your products. Its OK to request some information during the stream if you can’t answer something, but really you should know everything. If you use an influencer, you need to be aware that they’re not going to engage your audience so much, because they don’t know how to.

23:44 - 27:43 - Top Tips for Shoppable Live Streams - Dive in, give it a go. Send an email out to your list or post it on social announcing that youre doing it, and that will commit you to giving it a go. If you have a founder that can do it thats perfect, otherwise you can use a sales rep, product developer, anyone really who has really good knowledge of the brand and products, and is comfortable doing a stream. Something that I think makes it slightly easier is that there will be a chat function there, so you do feel you’re speaking to people, rather than just at a screen hoping someone is watching.

Your streams should ideally drive sales, engage the community, create content for you, and provide education to your audience.

27:52 - 42:40 - Big Mistakes to Avoid - Getting a celebrity or influencer to do the stream. It sounds fun, it sounds like it’ll draw the audience in, but then they won’t be able to engage them so well. You need to at least pair them with someone from the brand. Another mistakes is not committing to it properly. Once a month wont get you anywhere. You need to do at least once per week for 6 months to build the program, develop and optimise it. You need to learn what your audience likes, what themes work, what content they want.

42:41 - 50:55 - How to Constantly Improve? - Having a feedback loop is essential, both from your team and your audience. Make your own notes, you’ll know a few things happened that you liked or didnt like. Consider getting a coach to help you with your style, the way you present, and of course, keep ontop of the sector. Make sure you know what consumers want, how they want to engage, and the types of content that are working.

51:08 - Who Would Sarah Like to Take For Lunch in the D2C Marketing World?

Some of the producers and programmers at QVC, whats their secret sauce?

51:58 - Sarah’s Must-Have Tools:

  • A simple LED light works better than a ring light for her
  • A tripod for your camera
  • Potentially broadcast software if you’re using a DSLR


If you’d like to hear more from Sarah, you can connect with her on LinkedIn or head over to https://sarahwilliams.tv/

  continue reading

218 episodes

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