Great Lockdown sheds new light on the invisible infrastructure supporting e-commerce

With billions of people at home, e-commerce has taken on a new significance in consumers’ lives. But online shopping is not without its own physical footprint. 

Naming the current recession as the ‘Great Lockdown’ this week, the IMF zeroed in on where much of the hurt is coming from. As much as COVID-19 is first and foremost a health issue, the economic damage is largely being caused by social distancing measures that governments have been compelled to implement. 

With restaurants, bars, shops and other physical spaces of commerce forced to close, the one redemptive light of trade has been supplied by e-commerce… in fact in some regions it’s been actively encouraged by local governments. Its ability to persist in the most hostile of conditions has seen it flourish in places that have traditionally been slow to embrace it.   

A consumer survey from Nielsen recently revealed the extent to which habits have already changed across Europe. France and Italy, relatively slow historically to adopt online shopping options, are seeing dramatic spikes in uptake.   

Of course, e-commerce’s digital DNA does not insulate it from the hurdles the ‘real’ world faces. But if you work in e-commerce or digital marketing, you’ll know how easy it can be to forget the invisible physical infrastructure that sits behind our screens.  

We tend to deal in digital abstractions. In lines of code and sheets of data, plugins and platforms, cookies (albeit decreasingly) and conversion rates. 

As an affiliate in particular, where your role is focused squarely on engaging consumers online and driving qualified traffic to relevant advertisers, it’s easy to become immersed in this virtual realm.  

But with the click of one ‘buy’ button, a customer sets in motion a chain of physical logistics that remain largely hidden to us.  

E-commerce’s physical roots provoke delivery dilemmas 

The outbreak of COVID-19 across the globe has shed new light on this hidden world. From the factories that manufacture our goods and the warehouse workers who pack them, to the haulage and shipping companies that transport them across land, sea and air, and the couriers and delivery drivers that complete the last mile to our doors. 

While e-commerce may represent the equivalent of a lifeboat for many shuttered retailers right now, it is still heavily anchored in this physical world and dependent upon it.  

The peculiar nature of COVID-19 therefore means many retailers face an impossible situation at the moment.  

The drop in foot traffic to physical stores as a consequence of social distancing means there is an excess of stock building up in warehouses.  

Though e-commerce has picked up some of the slack in this respect, as more people shop online it is still overshadowed by the volume of goods that would previously have been bought in stores and which are now piling up in warehouses with nowhere to go. Spanish fashion giant Inditex, the owner of Zara, was just one prominent brand that’s been forced to write off over $300m off its Spring/Summer collection due to the pandemic’s effects on brick-and-mortar shopping. 

US-based discount affiliate RetailMeNot has noted in recent research that the number of brands now offering free shipping in their offers is rapidly increasing across several categories as many seek to offload their inventory online. 

Simultaneously, the virality of the pandemic has restricted the ability of warehouse workers to prepare these goods for delivery. Whether it be due to contracting the virus itself or a lack of safe working conditions in such environments, many staff are simply unable to do their jobs.  

Responding to this dilemma, Dunelm – a UK homeware brand and Awin client – closed down their website, temporarily making it ‘browse-only’ while they reorganized logistics to make it as safe as possible for employees before reopening sections of it gradually to fulfil mounting online orders. 

For delivery partners, the crisis has put a pressure on their systems and workers unlike any witnessed before.  

Glovo is an Italian logistics startup who enables Carrefour to deliver its supermarket produce to city-based customers within 30-minutes of receiving the order. Since the lockdown was enforced, uptake of the service has increased tenfold.  

Even Amazon, a company renowned for its logistical prowess, has been forced to transform its warehousing and fulfillment facilities. Last month it recruited an extra 100,000 new warehouse workers and increased pay for those workers by around $2 an hour.  Third-party sellers can no longer rely on Amazon’s fulfillment support either, as it’s prioritized shipment for a select group of items it identified as essentials, including medical and household goods.    

Collaboration is key to survival for affiliates 

For affiliates, the need to understand how this invisible infrastructure functions has never been greater. Ensuring they are directing their valuable traffic to brands that can actually deliver to customers may be the difference between an affiliate business surviving the Great Lockdown or not. 

And key to this survival will be collaboration from across businesses and across industry. 

Within our own community, one of the most concerted efforts in this direction has been spearheaded by the CSS affiliate RedBrain 

Pulling together a list of delivery couriers its numerous brand partners used and publishing this for peers to view, the company hoped to help fellow affiliates respond nimbly should any of those couriers run into delivery difficulties.  

“Right from the outset of the crisis it was clear that a burden would be placed on the distribution networks,” said RedBrain’s Mitch Eccles, who initiated the project. “We thought it prudent to monitor these for any potential disruption and, by sharing this data with the industry, we hoped to provide a collective benefit for everyone.” 

Having collated information from merchant sites, as well as inviting other companies to contribute details, RedBrain’s public document now counts almost 400 advertisers and their respective courier partners.  Alongside this are latest updates from each courier’s own status pages and another sheet describing any disruption that brands may have had in their ability to deliver to customers. 

As well as contributing to RedBrain’s central sheet of information, Awin has attempted to share its own insights and information to better support the industry at this time.  

From the already published performance tracker visualization, local business information hubs and crisis initiatives board, to further projects in the pipeline aimed at ensuring our partners are equipped to navigate the crisis.  

Such efforts exemplify the affiliate industry’s tight knit sense of community and, by continuing to provide better transparency around such issues, we all stand a better chance of emerging from the Great Lockdown in good standing.

For more information on COVID-19, please visit our information hub where we bring you the latest news from the Awin Group, as well as links to network insights and useful pointers, alongside wider updates.  

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The Amazon Effect: Awin Group’s take on its recent announcement

Earlier this week, Amazon announced plans to make drastic cuts commission rates for affiliates, which see some product categories reduced by more than 50%.

Awin and ShareASale have already felt the ripple effect of this, with publisher applications to our networks and individual merchant programs skyrocketing. As leading global performance marketing companies offering innovative, ethical affiliate marketing solutions, our trusted platforms provide publishers with easy access to products and services across retail, travel and accommodations, entertainment or any sector in between.

Awin’s Global Strategy Director Kevin Edwards sat down with our US Partner Acquisition & Development Manager Jeannine Crooks to get her take on Amazon’s announcement and how the Awin Group is readily available to assist Amazon affiliates now looking for a better home for their performance marketing activity.

KE: Jeannine, you’ve been speaking to a large number of affiliates in recent days about Amazon’s recent announcement. What is your sense of what’s going on?

JC: Affiliates are quite frustrated about having their commissions slashed so deeply. In some cases their incomes will be reduced by 50% or more, depending on their niche. Amazon has rules about what publishers can and cannot do. Their publishers navigated these waters, but are now faced with the potential reward for their efforts disappearing after Amazon’s announcement revealed significant concerns regarding their care for their partners.

KE: Many affiliates are heavily reliant on Amazon for revenue, what are the alternatives?

JC: For the most part, the same or virtually similar products available on Amazon are likely to be sold in a store outside of Amazon. There is great opportunity for publishers to still generate substantial income with affiliate marketing and promote the same or similar products by working directly with the merchant via a different affiliate network like Awin or ShareASale, which in most instances can offer longer cookie lengths and higher commission rates.

KE: How are you advising affiliates on how to plug revenue gaps they may be anticipating?

JC: I’m encouraging affiliates to find alternative merchants and swap out links as quickly as possible. It’s not always easy, but the Awin and ShareASale teams are readily available to assist in the process and prepared to provide merchant recommendations, as well as offer support in any way we can regarding navigating our interfaces and promotional tools. Though there’s only a week until the cuts take place on April 21, by focusing on the top performing pages/posts first, it’s possible to minimize the losses until everything has been switched to another merchant source.

KE: Could you quickly run through the process for signing up with Awin and ShareASale?

JC: We make the process for affiliates easy. Publishers looking to join our networks need to visit Awin.com or ShareASale.com and can sign up in five minutes or less. Following completion, new joiners will hear on next steps to finalizing their publisher profile, navigating our interface and joining merchant programs within two business days.

KE: What tools and tech would you recommend they use if they’re interested in promoting Awin and ShareASale?

The most important tool within the Awin network is Publisher MasterTag, which is home to Convert-A-Link and Bounceless Tracking. Convert-a-Link enables existing links to be automatically converted to monetized links instantly, with Bounceless Tracking ensuring the best tracking method is applied to any link so our affiliates are rewarded for all of their activities. Awin and ShareASale each offer a bookmarklet tool that can be installed to a browser and can instantly provide deeplinks on the fly to whatever merchant product page you are on; both are just as easy to use as the Amazon affiliate bar.

KE: There are always hidden gems among our advertiser base, who would you say are rising stars or brands who are particularly engaged with us at this time?

There are always bright spots during any tough time. My personal favorites are EtsyOutschoolMartha & Marley Spoon, and Nakedwines.com on Awin, and Sun BasketMasterClass and Madison Reed on ShareASale. Each of these merchants offer something special consumers are craving right now and have communicated they’re ready to quickly approve any new publisher applications.

In working directly with these brands – or any brand for that matter – affiliates will see greater value placed on the support they provide each retailer, as they are often considered an integral part of the team and deserving of respect and fair compensation for the hard work they do. There is an understanding that if you don’t treat your affiliates fairly they are likely to move on, or even promote your competitor, just as affiliates are moving away from Amazon now.

Please contact our publisher management team for more information on Awin and ShareASale, including how to join our platforms and finding advertiser partnership opportunities. For more information on the wider COVID-19 situation, please visit our information hub where we bring you the latest news from the Awin Group, as well as links to network insights, useful pointers and wider updates.

 

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