备忘录安装 Shopify

一位Youtuber和他的制作团队在一家豪华探险服务公司的帮助下冒险前往南极洲,忍受了 "寒冷 "到不需要手套的温度,在这种温和的条件下忍受了50个小时,声称这是他做过的体力上最困难的事情,然后在徒步4个小时到达山脊后插上了Shopify的旗帜。"野兽先生宣称:"现在这里是Shopify山了。这段赞助视频非常老套,也过于戏剧化,但没人能说它没有达到预期效果。

上一份报告进入野兽先生

吉米-唐纳森(Jimmy "MrBeast" Donaldson)是一位杰出的营销家、创造者、商人和慈善家。对于 Shopify 来说,现在的时机再好不过了。在经历了艰难的一年之后,公司需要一些精明的营销、价值创造、新业务和慈善事业。从这个角度看(也仅仅是从这个角度看),双方的合作是有意义的。在 12 分钟的广告中,唐纳森花了大量时间称赞 Shopify;自12 月 24 日发布以来,该广告已被观看了 6100 万次。从这个角度来看,这个数字是超级碗典型广告收视率的一半以上,而我认为其成本(700 万美元)只是超级碗的一小部分。

为了向广告商表示敬意,团队在攀登过一座岩石山峰后,插上了一面旗帜,并宣布这座处女峰将永远被称为 Shopify 山。

不过,虽然MrBeast店面的年收入已达到八位数(Charm.io估计年收入为4500万美元),但我认为Shopify正在为自己的崛起之年做好准备。2023年将是Shopify的企业级商户年,它试图在竞争中更胜一筹(即Salesforce的Commerce Cloud和Adobe的Magento)。Shopify 曾经以吸引希望成为下一个 "野兽先生"(至少在商品销售方面)的消费者而闻名,现在正成为大型零售商、市场和品牌的首选。这就是 Shopify 要攀登的山峰。

在经历了股价暴跌 74% 的一年后,Shopify 开始重 "质 "轻 "量"--我用这个词来形容其不断增加的 "大型 GMV "零售商目录并不恰当。在过去的一年里,许多以线上为先导的品牌抛弃了它们的定制购物车,选择了更广阔的天地。Supreme转向 Shopify 就是一个例子:

Supreme 将在 2023 年迎来新的开始。据dropsgg刚刚透露,该品牌已将其在线商店从之前的平台更换为 Shopify 的电子商务服务。据悉,此次更换拥有更好的僵尸防范系统,并将于下周开始运行。

另一个例子是ButcherBox,该公司正在逐页推出 Shopify 转换,将定制构建留给外包支持和更先进的工具。在《TechCrunch》和《How I Built This》等刊物上宣布了其 6 亿美元的年收入后,该公司也(悄悄地)证实了这一举措。摘自 2022 年 11 月的Shopify Masters 播客

时至今日,ButcherBox 仍与第三方农场、加工厂、切割厂、配送厂、运输公司、客户服务公司和技术公司合作。这也是该公司使用 Shopify 开网店的重要原因。

因此,当唐纳森花了这么多精力把他的 50 小时挑战之一变成 Shopify 的广告时,我认为这是该公司在进行更大规模的市场推广之前提高温度的一种尝试。时间会证明市场推广的效果。但作为一个独立的项目,其影响力已经足够大了。甚至还有人试图为尼泊尔布特瓦尔的 Shopify 山命名(至少其中一张图片来自唐纳森的南极之旅)。整个subreddits都在讨论这段视频的吸引力(或鄙视)--我想,对于人缘极佳的唐纳森来说,这样的反应并不多见。

Shopify 早该恢复状态了。在不断增长的企业零售商目录的推动下,该公司的黑色星期五和网络星期一创下了历史新高。这相当于销售额比 2021 年增长了 19%。2022 年的运营亏损额为 6.19 亿美元,公司将投入 10 亿美元建设 Shopify Fulfillment 网络,因此抓住大型零售商及其商品销售总值是未来盈利的关键。这与其自身对 2023 年的预测一致

野兽先生的购物赞助视频并不是他最好的作品。但估计每天会有 30 万新用户,我相信他的热情粉丝会原谅他的。至于 Shopify,赞助视频提醒我们,它面临着自己独特的挑战。Shopify 既是一家金融服务公司,也是一家电子商务技术提供商。虽然这则原生广告很低俗,但它让人们意识到,Shopify 可能是一家价值被低估的上市公司。

对于 Shopify 来说,一切都与 GMV 有关。Shopify发展成熟收入流的方法不再仅仅是小型商家(MrBeast的受众正是这些商家)和订阅收入。据知情人士透露,2022 年,Shopify 超过 30% 的收入是订阅驱动的。但我相信,这种商业模式正在演变。Shopify Payments 向商家收取交易额的 2.4-2.9%,Shopify Capital 正在发展其贷款产品,销售点系统继续吸引全渠道友好型零售商。

Shopify 需要一批九位数的在线零售商来扭转局面,并提醒投资者它仍将是未来商业的重要贡献者。这可不是一座小山。

更新(1/3/2023): Shopify 推出了 "Commerce Components by Shopify"(CCS)。该公司通过新闻稿宣布,其目标客户是企业零售商:"Shopify进入下一个增长时代:重新定义企业零售"。该技术堆栈允许将 Shopify 集成到现有系统中。上文提到的 ButcherBox 就是一个例子。这家食品零售商网站的大部分内容仍然是定制的,而赠品流程则由第三方托管。Shopify 补充道

Shopify 的 Commerce Components 为企业零售商提供了两全其美的解决方案:使用 Shopify 的基础、高性能组件(如我们的结账系统,其转换率比普通结账系统高 72%,在移动端高 91%)以及灵活的 API,以构建与零售商首选后台服务无缝集成的动态客户体验。

今天刚刚公布的企业零售商名单包括:Mattel、Glossier、JB Hi-Fi、Steve Madden、Spanx 和 Staples:美泰、Glossier、JB Hi-Fi、Steve Madden、Spanx 和 Staples。

作者:Web Smith | 艺术:Alex Remy

备忘录:进入野兽先生

Every industry is overdue for a digital-first reset. Even casual restaurants are beginning to adjust to a brave new world, accelerated like many other categories by the pandemic.

By and large, foot traffic slowed at shopping malls. Retailers and department stores earned the majority of the media’s attention, but in the process, tens of millions of square feet in commercial kitchens and dining rooms were going to waste. The wage workers who ran them suffered from job losses. Restaurants were sinking into bankruptcy by the dozen. Over the last year, new concepts began to take shape based on proven experiments. To better understand those experiments, I spoke with one of the foremost experts.

When Kat Cole calls to discuss the inner workings of food service, you answer the phone. There aren’t many executives with more knowledge or experience than her. Cole is stepping down after 10 years of success and innovation as President and COO at Focus Brands, the parent company to a number of mall dining fixtures that you’ve likely walked past thousands of times on shopping trips. Leading a company with billions in annual sales, Cole understands the power of placement and foot traffic. While customers aren’t walking past quite as often as they did before the pandemic, she was still incredibly optimistic about the prospects of her industry. Concepts like Nextbite and Virtual Dining Concepts (VDC) have revolutionized the casual dining industry. But the business isn’t new.

As early as 2016, UberEats tested virtual kitchens as a strategy to drive revenue for restaurants with excess production capacity. Today, there are over 5,000 virtual brands on UberEats across the country. Early on, in a partnership with a well-known casual wing chain, Uber tested a virtual brand concept within the Eats app to improve sales by rebranding their wings to reach a wider audience. It worked. When eCommerce met human resources and excess production capacity, a new vertical in dining was born. Today, this industry, also populated by GrubHub, DoorDash, and Postmates (which Uber recently acquired) is in the midst of another evolution.

A recent article on Today.com began with:

Ghost kitchen, dark kitchen, virtual kitchen, cloud kitchen, whatever you call them, they’re popping up everywhere, with estimates placing the number at 1,500 in the United States. [1]

Virtual kitchens and ghost, dark, or cloud kitchens are not all interchangeable. A “ghost” establishment, in this context, is essentially a commissary kitchen or a facility where restaurants produce food for distribution to their satellite locations. Former Uber CEO Travis Kalanick acquires real estate and converts them into food production facilities through his company CloudKitchens. Platforms like DoorDash, UberEats, and Postmates then markets the many brands that are built atop of the physical infrastructure. CloudKitchens recently raised $400 million from Goldman Sachs and the Saudi Arabia wealth fund to finance these real estate acquisitions.

Companies like Robert Earl’s Virtual Dining Concepts partners with existing restaurants to monetize excess capacity. And like many restaurants that rely on foot traffic at mall complexes, there is quite a bit of it. Earl isn’t just the owner of VDC. He has stakes in casual dining chains like Buca Di Beppo, Mixology, and Planet Hollywood. In June of 2020, Earl’s latest acquisition turned heads. The ownership  group of Bravo and Brio filed for bankruptcy just three months earlier due to a COVID-related hit to its already flailing business. Earl seemed to have another vision for them.

Earl Enterprises, the parent company of Buca di Beppo, Earl of Sandwich and Planet Hollywood, has confirmed the purchase of Bravo Cucina Italian and Brio Tuscan Grille restaurants in a deal that will bring back 4,000 employees left in “limbo” since FoodFirst filed for bankruptcy, Robert Earl, chairman of Earl Enterprises, said Thursday. [2]

Earl acquired capacity in much the same way that Kalanick’s CloudKitchens acquired real estate to build functional facilities. But in Earl’s hybrid format, he can accomplish both dining formats. Virtual Dining Concepts is driving high-margin business to this suite of causal restaurants. If they survive the pandemic, they will be able to service traditional and online customers at once. This isn’t unlike any other restaurant that delivers. What organizations like Nextbite and VDC are building adds a significant layer atop of the Olo-driven last-mile delivery network.

Companies like Olo provide the interface between restaurants, their ordering systems and the on-demand ecosystem. With excess capacity at casual dining and a need for new demand, celebrity-driven virtual dining has emerged as a new prospect for a suffering industry. It just might work.

Within the next year, Virtual Dining Concepts, a subsidiary of Earl Enterprises has a goal of reaching 20 celebrity and 20 consumer brands in its delivery portfolio. The pandemic, combined with targeted social media advertising and the omnipresence of delivery platforms have brewed the perfect storm to fill a massive supply of kitchen capacity with these new concepts. [3]

The economics favor restaurant ownership groups that can typically earn nearly 60% of the gross margin of each sale. The celebrity that generates interest for the sale can earn as much as 25% for a sale that that they had little to do with. It’s a brilliant system. And thanks to a recent partnership with a YouTube creator, it’s about to become a popular option for ailing foodservice retailers.

Linear Commerce: Enter MrBeast

I downloaded the app (currently No. 1 in the app store), manually inputted my address and billing information and then waited for the branded sandwich. Constructed within the kitchen of one of Robert Earl’s Bravo restaurants, the “I launched 300 burger restaurants nationwide” promise was met with operational efficiency. When I ordered the Beast Style burger, I was surprised that it arrived with 15 minutes of purchase. I photographed it and laughed at the fact that Jimmy “MrBeast” Donaldson was going to successfully store hundreds of thousands of new credit card numbers thanks to this promotion, including my own. And then I walked upstairs to hand it off to my teenage daughter.

Oh my god, Dad. How did you get this? I love MrBeast. Oh my god.

At 13 years old, she’s adept at understanding the world of creators and their collective impact on culture, commerce, and trends. But even I was surprised that she was excited for a burger that she wouldn’t have otherwise eaten without the branding.

Jimmy Donaldson has quite the story. In a 2019 interview with Casey Neistat, the two creators discuss his improbable rise from obscurity to nearly 50 million Youtube subscribers. The 22-year-old owns an audience larger than most multinational media companies.

Donaldson represents a new class of creator with the power to move entire retail markets. In a recent conversation with DTC titan Nik Sharma, he mentioned an eye opening figure.

Was just looking at 2PM DTC Power List and as I was looking through, I wondered if you’d ever put creator brands that crush it. I think definitely Danny Duncan’s brand. I mean he’ll do nine figures in revenue with $0 ad spend.

For the vast majority of direct-to-consumer retail, achieving a $100 million revenue mark is highly improbable. Doing so without advertising is impossible. For the top 1% of creators, commerce is just a natural progression. They will earn far more in retail sales than through advertising.

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Here’s how much the biggest YouTube stars earned this year:1. Ryan Kaji: $29.5M2. MrBeast: $24M3. Dude Perfect: $23M4. Rhett and Link: $20M5. Markiplier: $19.5M6. Preston Arsement: $19M7. Nastya: $18.5M8. Blippi: $17M9. David Dobrik: $15.5M10. Jeffree Star: $15M

Ryan Kaji, the 9-year-old toy reviewer, has an omnichannel toy empire worth over $500 million by some estimation. What began as a trend of marketing merchandise has evolved as other industries have adopted eCommerce strategies. The digital layer provided by VDC, Olo, Nextbite, and others has provided new opportunity for this class of creators.

Before year’s end, you’ll see Marques Brownies and Dobrik’s Dumplings. And while the creators will certainly line their pockets, Robert Earl’s foresight into this marketing strategy is due to revolutionize an industry crippled by the lack of foot traffic that leaders like Kat Cole once relied upon to fuel growth in the industry.

MrBeast wasn’t the first creator to put his mark on a fast casual product. But this partnership will be the most transformative for an industry in need.

When this partnership was announced, it was common to see skepticism from commerce industry veterans and advertising executives. One chimed in: “I can’t figure out what’s even really that interesting about it, but I’m new to Mr. Beast.” Another added: “I still don’t see the connection to helping restaurants and charity?” But what’s truer than ever is that commerce follows audience. And the physics of building brands the traditional way is erased by the new mechanisms of linear commerce at scale. For a creator who spends a great deal of his time performing acts of charity, there seems to be more scale on the way, and not just for a struggling restaurant industry, but for the 50 million subscribers who’ve cheered him as he’s turned sponsorships and personal earnings into viral giveaways.

Wherever 50 million fans go, industries will be disrupted. Sometimes for the better.

作者:Web Smith | 编辑:Hilary Milnes | 艺术:亚历克斯-雷米 |关于 2PM