This week we share Shopify's latest Summer '23 Editions. To get started, we advise you to read our last article.
Shopify Editions, a vast presentation of its most recent innovations, are released twice a year as of last year. The last Shopify Summer '23 Edition was published last week and featured several AI enhancements, new collaborative selling capabilities, enhanced checkout, and more.
The public debut of Shopify Collective, a new feature that enables brands on Shopify to cooperate and sell products from one another's stores, was one of the major announcements during the Summer '23 Editions.
Here's how it works:
In short, Shopify stores' internal dropshipping marketplace is what it is!
The launch of Shopify Credit, a business credit card created especially for its merchants, was the second noteworthy announcement from the Summer '23 Editions. The card is issued by Celtic Bank, powered by Stripe (which also handles Shopify Payments and Shopify Balance), and accepted anywhere Visa is accepted.
Instead of credit checks for approval and credit limits, a merchant's performance in sales and whether or not they use Shopify Payments are taken into account. The card offers 1% cash back on all other categories, including wholesale, marketing, and shipping, and 3% on a retailer's top spending category.
Additionally, Shopify emphasized that it will not impose any costs (apart from interest) for setup, yearly, late, foreign transactions, replacement cards, or any other type of fee.
The "magical listings" on eBay, which generate product descriptions based on an item's title, category, and other information entered by the seller, recently incorporated OpenAI technology. When that software is updated, picture recognition will be used, enabling vendors to make product listings based on images.
The Internet is being overtaken by short-form video. It all began with TikTok...Technically, Vine was where it all began. Recall Vine? the 2013-launched, by Twitter acquired, six-second looping video platform that was shut down in 2017 Every other social media and video site has since been making an effort to take a piece of the short-form video pie.
We'll recap Digiday's latest summary of how Google, Meta, and Snap are competing with TikTok in the short-form video below:
Have you ever wished you had the time and energy to properly redesign certain rooms in your house?
With Decorify, a new Wayfair app that employs generative AI to produce shoppable, photorealistic photos of spaces in your home, you can now scratch that itch. Customers submit a photo of their room and ask the app to redesign it in a different look, such as industrial, bohemian, farmhouse, crack house, or mid-century contemporary. The room's photos are then redone by Decorify to mirror the desired mood and aesthetic. Customers can then browse a variety of designs, which include items that can be bought from Wayfair.
As an alternative, you can choose specific pieces from your room and have Wayfair's model swap them out for equivalent pieces in your preferred style.
Here's a recap of TikTok eCommerce moves during the past two years:
30 new dimensions and metrics have been added to Google Analytics 4's eCommerce measurement capabilities, according to Google. Merchants will be able to analyze metrics by product and by attributes like brand and promotions for a more detailed examination of what's driving sales thanks to new dimensions that include item affiliation, brand, category, ID, list name, list position, item name, variant, and shipping tier, among others.
Additionally, Google added new eCommerce indicators, such as gross item revenue, gross purchase revenue, item revenue, things added to the basket, items viewed, shipping amount, tax amount, and more, to the custom report builder.
Gross purchase income was previously calculated by merchants using a formula that combined other metrics, but it will soon be immediately accessible via the custom report builder.
To allow customers to pay for their Microsoft Store purchases in installments, Microsoft is introducing the PayPal Pay Later option in the United States, the United Kingdom, Australia, Germany, France, Spain, and Italy. Venmo, which is now accepted for Xbox sales in the U.S., will also be an option for customers in the country.
Based on a text by Shopifreaks