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Emotional e-commerce: The next wave of e-commerce

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Jason Goldberg, Founder and CEO at Fab wrote an interesting post earlier this week titled The 3rd wave of e-commerce disruption: emotional commerce. For the historians amongst you Jason has commodity commerce as the first wave, which was all about bringing value and convenience to the consumer a la Amazon, and digital commerce as the second wave. I think I would bundle digital in with the first wave as it is still fundamentally about the same products but with more convenience and at lower prices.

But whether it is the second wave or the third wave I think we are at the start of a very interesting new wave. Jason calls it emotional commerce and describes it as 'all about bringing emotional purchases online'. These are less regular purchases of non-commodity products where the purchase decision is thoughtful in categories like furniture, home accessories, fashion, art and jewellery (these are the categories that Fab sells).

Jason then lists the following three 'principles which will carry the day in emotional commerce':

  • Exciting merchandise – i.e. great products that get people excited and can't be found elsewhere. Products that make people say 'wow'.
  • Amazing shopping experiences – rather than the in-and-out-as-quick-as-possible of Amazon's one-click commodity commerce, emotional commerce is all about getting lost in the moment, bringing the fun back into shopping.
  • Brand building – emotional commerce works best on aspirational sites where trust has been built over time.
This gels with a lot of things I have been thinking about recently. On merchandise side, recoupling design and manufacturing and the use of 3D printing and other technologies to make short run production affordable offers the potential for many new and exciting products, many of them personalised. The most interesting of these products will help us connect with the meaning and purpose in our lives. With regard to shopping experiences I think the opportunity lies in leveraging our extensive 'digital exhaust' to figure out what we might like and present it to us in an exciting and inspiring environment. I think the best of these experiences will be as much about learning as they are about selling. Imagine going into a top department store and having the best salesperson impartially guide and educate you without any pressure to buy – that is what it should be like.

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I think brand will be important, but it will come over time as a result of providing exciting products and amazing shopping experiences. The best definition of 'brand' is 'a good promise delivered' and exciting products and amazing shopping experiences is certainly a good promise.

We are seeing small pieces of evidence that great products and amazing shopping experiences are the new drivers of growth – Fab's success and the recent IPO of Moleskin are two that spring to mind – but innovative as they are there is space for all the examples I've seen to go much further.

(Nic Brisbourne is partner at DFJ Esprit, one of Europe's leading venture capital firms. The post has been reproduced with the author's permission from his blog, The Equity Kicker.)

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To become a guest contributor with VCCircle, write to shrija@vccircle.com


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