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valgeo
First there was ecommerce, a term developed in the early '80s to
abbreviate "electronic commerce," or sales made possible through
electronic funds transfer (and later, the Internet). Since then,
marketers have gleefully affixed various letters to the word "commerce"
to describe sales (or the potential for sales) made through different
platforms: m-commerce for mobile, f-commerce for Facebook and
p-commerce, which I've discovered recently, is an abbreviation for both
"participatory commerce" or "Pinterest commerce."
What Is Participatory Commerce?
A few quick Google searches reveal that the phrase participatory commerce was first coined
in 2005 by Mark Pincus, founder and CEO of gaming juggernaut Zynga. It
was popularized (to a degree) five years later, when entrepreneurs
Daniel Gulati and Vivian Weng used it to describe the model for their
new online retailing startup, FashionStake (acquired by Fab.com in January 2012).
Participatory commerce, according to Gulati, is a sales model that
allows shoppers to participate in the design, selection or funding of
the products they purchase. NIKEiD, for example, lets customers customize the colors and materials of Nike shoes. Online womenswear retailer ModCloth has a "Be the Buyer"
program that invites shoppers to vote to determine what designs are
sent into full-scale production, similar to a program FashionStake once
offered. Users of Kickstarter are able to determine whether a product
gets made by contributing to a funding goal. These types of features are
frequently grouped under the definition of "social commerce," or
s-commerce, as well.
A Second Meaning: Pinterest Commerce
When Pinterest's popularity began to skyrocket in mid-2011, retailers
were quick to recognize its potential as a sales driver, giving rise to
the phrase "Pinterest commerce," which, like participatory commerce,
has sometimes been abbreviated to "p-commerce."
Pinterest itself has not yet enabled selling on its site, but retailers continue to run tests to see if they can convert the network's more than 48 million users to customers. Some retailers, including Wayfair,
have found that visitors from Pinterest are more likely to make a
purchase and to spend more than those referred by other social networks,
including Facebook and Twitter.
Should You Use "P-Commerce"?
No. Not only will you sound like a tool, there's a good chance no one will know what you're talking about.
Related Terms
Social commerce: E-commerce that involves social
media, either in driving a customer towards purchase, or involving a
customer socially during a transaction (the latter of which is also
referred to as participatory commerce).
Pinfluencer: A Pinterest user with a large following, or reach, on the network.
Pinnable: An object, such as a photo or article, that can be pinned to (i.e. bookmarked on) Pinterest.
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