The latest release from SundaySky includes new data from the first quarter of 2011, and while relatively little has changed in terms of retailers' widespread adoption, it appears that consumers' appetite for ecommerce video continues to grow.
The increasing interest from online shoppers, combined with retailers' general inability to meet that demand, presents a unique opportunity for ambitious merchants both large and small. Below are some of the key findings from SundaySky, which paints a very convincing picture of why you need to implement ecommerce video as soon as possible.
Give consumers what they want
The number of subscribers to online retailers' YouTube channels increased 21 percent from the fourth quarter of 2010 to the first quarter of 2011. That number climbed to 571,000 subscribers to retail channels, totaling 420 million views of retail videos on YouTube alone - a 13-percent increase. Meanwhile, the number of retail videos posted on YouTube reached nearly 96,000 during Q1 2011, which represents a 9-percent increase. Shoppers are consuming ecommerce video at a significantly faster rate than merchants are providing it, but that window of opportunity is closing.
All or nothing for major retailers
Among the largest online retailers in the world, it seems that video is either being mass-scaled or all but ignored. Thirty-two percent of the top 50 online merchants boasted more than 1,000 videos on their sites in Q1 2011, compared to 22 percent in the previous quarter. However, 36 percent of the top 50 had fewer than 10 videos on their sites, and a staggering 68 percent of all retailers are not yet exploiting the obvious and accessible rewards of on-site ecommerce videos - in any way, shape or form.
Time to act is now
While the large majority of retailers continue to ignore the benefits of video, a definite shift is taking place in the ecommerce industry. The number of major retailers posting more than 100 videos on YouTube during the first quarter of 2011 increased by 15 percent since the fourth quarter of 2010, indicating that the race may be on. Still, that number represents the minority, with 48 percent of the top 50 surpassing the 100-video mark.
Enormous SEO benefits
According to the SundaySky report, nearly 18 percent of the major search engine results pages during the first quarter of 2011 contained video results, and most video results for retail-related keywords were posted only on YouTube. In an analysis of 34,000 top keywords within 17 categories from Shopping.com's top searches, computer gaming had the highest presence of video results while furniture had the lowest.
Getting results
Zappos has for a long time been a benchmark of many online retail best practices, and its use of ecommerce video is no exception. The company annually generates more than half a million dollars in incremental revenue simply by following video SEO guidelines, and the amount of traffic accredited to video results is estimated at more than 77,000 visits per month.
While Zappos is one of the top 50 retailers to adopt ecommerce video on a massive scale, smaller retailers simply need to get into the game rather than watch from the sidelines. From posting a handful of simple product videos onto your site to leveraging your company's own YouTube channel and building out your brand, the power of video is growing and too many retailers are missing out.