The study, from Nosto, suggests that retailers need to work harder (and do it faster) to get ‘impatient’ mobile visitors to buy. Essentially they need to make an impression in 164 seconds on mobile, compared to 239 seconds on desktop. That’s just over 2 minutes.
But with each visitor spending nearly 30% less time on a site when they come via mobile than they do on desktop, retailers face the key challenge of optimising the mobile experience so shoppers can browse their sites quickly, find exactly what they are looking for and leave having made a purchase.
These are the key findings of a new global study of ecommerce in fashion from Nosto, the ecommerce personalisation and retail AI platform. The research is based on an analysis of 1.2 billion visits to fashion ecommerce websites globally over the whole of 2018.
The data suggests for example that 58.1% of the traffic to fashion retailers globally is now on mobile, nearly twice as much as on desktop (31.5%). And by Q4 of 2018, mobile’s share of revenue in fashion ecommerce exceeded desktop 46% vs 44% (compared with 37% vs 50% in Q1).
On average fashion shoppers browse for 164 seconds when they visit a site on mobile – and 239 seconds on desktop. And they are less likely to make a purchase on mobile, with the conversion rate averaging 1.32% on smartphone (compared with 2.4% on desktop). The average order value (AOV) is also lower on mobile at $103 compared with $120 on desktop.
“The fashion retailers in our study are attracting nearly twice as much traffic from mobile as they are on desktop, but this creates a major challenge,” said Jim Lofgren CEO of Nosto. “Mobile visitors continue to take less time on site, are spending less per visit and are less likely to make a purchase. How do you maximise the precious seconds mobile visitors give you?”
“Part of the solution is about ensuring a mobile optimised website with fast page speeds and easy to view images and content. But the reality is that with a small mobile screen you have less on-page real estate to work with as well as having less time to woo the customer.”
This means personalising the experience based on the shopper’s online behaviour becomes incredibly important in fashion ecommerce according to Lofgren:
“Using artificial intelligence and machine learning to drive personalisation, you can maximize the space on a mobile screen by automatically showing shoppers the most relevant selection of products and complimentary items, including their preferred brands and styles – all in real-time.
“You can even instantly change the layout of the page and ensure shoppers are seeing the most appropriate images, offers and related content – such as blogs about fashion trends that might interest them. This will be the biggest driver for increasing both mobile sales and order values in fashion, as well as encouraging shoppers to spend longer on your site and to stop by again,” said Lofgren whose company’s fashion retail customers include Gymshark, Agent Provocateur, Aquascutum, Everlast, Helly Hansen and Volcom.
About the data
Nosto’s findings are based on an analysis of the first comprehensive analysis of shopper behavior in growth-stage fashion ecommerce for 2019 based on an analysis of 1.2 billion site visits for the 12 months of 2018. : 95% of the stores in the sample generate online sales between $500k and $30m, a minimum of 1k monthly site visits and a minimum of 300 orders a month. Merchants with a similar sales profile were selected to get a good sample of what is happening with this sector.