Black Friday set a record as the first $1 billion mobile shopping day in U.S. history
Online shoppers in the U.S. made $1.2 billion of
purchases via their phones and tablets on Black Friday, marking the
first billion-dollar mobile shopping day in U.S. history, according to
estimates from Adobe. The estimate marks a 33 percent increase over last
year’s mobile sales total for the day.
Overall, Adobe predicts that total online sales reached
$3.34 billion on the huge discount shopping day, on which retailers are
increasingly running the same discounts online as they do in their
stores.
Large retailers who have invested heavily in their mobile
websites and apps are seeing big gains this holiday season. At
Fanatics, an online retailer of licensed team sports apparel, 56 percent
of Thanksgiving day sales happened on mobile — 42 percent via phones
and 14 percent via tablets. These numbers were likely helped by
consumers making purchases while watching the day’s slate of football
games.
American consumers are increasingly comfortable making
purchases via their phones, and the popularity of larger screen sizes is
one contributor. Payment methods that simplify the checkout experience —
think Apple Pay, Android Pay and PayPal One Touch — are starting to
help, too.
Still, when it comes to mobile commerce, the U.S. lags
way behind some international markets such as China. On Singles Day,
China’s biggest shopping day, mobile commerce accounted for more than 80
percent of sales on Alibaba’s shopping sites.
The article was published on : verge
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