Mobile purchases have been on the rise since the dawn of the smartphone era, but have picked up the pace in recent years. In 2018, mobile ecommerce hit $980 billion accounting for 56% of all online purchases. In 2023, mobile ecommerce surpassed $2.2 trillion; 60% of the total ecommerce pie.
As more ecommerce sites and online marketplaces progress from ‘mobile-friendly’ to ‘mobile-first’ design, mobile’s dominance over desktop, PC and tablet is expected to grow. Here’s how you can prepare for the mobile takeover.
91% of consumers use smartphones to make purchases with three-quarters (75%) of them preferring to buy via mobile rather than desktop (15%) and tablet (6%). Mobiles also beat PCs in terms of website traffic (60% vs 40%), so why does mobile conversion (2-3% vs 4% for desktops) and mobile cart abandonment (84% vs 72% for desktops) still lag behind their larger cousin? In a word: design.
Consumers that don’t make purchases via mobile listed difficulties with inputting purchase info, visualising items on mobile, performing comparisons on smaller screens and finding the right product as some of the main drawbacks of mcommerce. Anyone that’s tried typing in card details into fiddly forms or flicking between Amazon tabs on a 5’’ screen will understand their pain. But with the move to mobile-first UX that could all change in 2024.
Instead of ‘mobile-friendly’ ecommerce sites, which are designed for desktop and adapted to mobile, 2024 will see the rise of ‘mobile-first’ UX. From fingerprint checkout and one-click payment via digital wallets (i.e. ApplePay) to facial recognition sign-ins and dedicated mobile apps optimised for smaller screens, online retailers are investing in innovative features to cater to their mobile-savvy audience.
This move to mobile-first makes commercial sense. Mobiles are cheaper than desktops and more portable, so mobile-first shopping opens up ecommerce to a wider consumer base anywhere, anytime. But what does this mean for brands selling on online marketplaces?
Be it a wider consumer base or increased mobile conversions, the move to mobile will provide great opportunities for brands willing to adapt. Those that act early and get ahead of the curve stand to benefit the most.
For more information on how you can prepare, get in touch with eManaged.