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P&G launch SIX Facebook Stores (Live Learning Labs)

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P&G have considerably upped their F-Commerce game by adding not one but six brand stores to Facebook. They are: TideGilletteOlayGainCoverGirlLuvs and Febreze

The following from Social Commerce Today: 

As with last year’s pilot P&G Facebook stores, P&G are outsourcing e-commerce heavy lifting; this time not to Amazon, but to PFSWeb‘s eStore – an independent online retailer that exclusively sells P&G products.  The f-commerce software is a very slick looking Resource Interactive product formally known as “off-the-wall”, but now rebranded as DCP (Distributed Commerce Platform). For a brand manufacturer with limited e-commerce experience, this outsourcing is smart.

Interestingly, P&G is leaving the door open for other retail partners to join the party and sell from their brands’ Facebook pages: A message on the splash tab of the e-commerce apps invites customers to “Purchase on Facebook through these trusted retailers” – although eStore is the only option currently available (Walmart is rumoured to be interested).

Apart from the innovative ‘f-commerce without tears’ approach adopted by P&G, what’s interesting is WHY P&G are doing f-commerce at all.

It seems that for P&G f-commerce is less about sales, and more about creating a “Live Learning Lab” for the business to learn about consumers, customer centricity and e-commerce.

Whilst it may be clear why P&G are selling on Facebook, it’s less clear why consumers will want to buy from the Facebook pages of P&G brands. Why buy P&G brands on Facebook when you can buy them on eStore, or any number of online beauty and household retailers?  It’s no cheaper or faster than on eStore – in fact the stores are (ports of) the eStore.  There appear to no added benefits to shopping from Facebook brand pages.

P&G might think that consumers will appreciate the theoretical convenience of not having to leave the familiar and trusted Facebook environment and click through to external websites, but we don’t think convenience is a real f-commerce benefit.  P&G may be setting up the store as a virtual flagship store, that like other flagship stores is not there to make money, but to build the brand, and if so fair enough.  But unless P&G offer a compelling benefit for shopping on Facebook, we’re not convinced it will work.

Ultimately, our view is that simply replicating what’s available elsewhere on the Web is not a viable f-commerce solution.  The future, we think, is in Facebook fan-stores offering fan-first and fan-only exclusives, along with exclusive branded fan merchandise. All with a view to activating brand advocacy.  If P&G don’t play the “fan-exclusives” card with f-commerce, consumers may be unwilling to shop there.

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