Is the e-commerce shift going to last?
- Will New Retail' help D2C brands succeed offline?
- D2C companies deliver customer delight and simplicity
E-commerce is taking off faster than ever. In the last couple of weeks, my Twitter timeline has been filled with operators gushing about how the weekends seem like Black Friday, even for non-essential commodities. Change is already here.
As we help thousands of businesses to move online, our platform is now handling Black Friday level traffic every day!
It won't be long before traffic has doubled or more.
Our merchants aren't stopping, neither are we. We need to scale our platform.https://t.co/e2JeyjcEeC pic.twitter.com/6lqSrNUCte
- Jean-Michel Lemieux (@jmwind) April 16, 2020
Looking at the above graph in this Tweet from Shopify CTO Jean-Michel Lemieux - and the passing, contextless mention of Offline2Online" - we got curious.
Beyond just the anecdotal evidence, we looked for signs that tell us e-commerce is being adopted at a faster pace. One way to ascertain that is to look at the historical data of how Shopify has been onboarding merchants for the last two years on a monthly basis, and compare that with what happened this year in Q1.
All of these data points come from PipeCandy's own data platform that tracks close to 750K+ Shopify merchants with historical data for each:
New domains using Shopify each month
While 2020 started on a faster clip than 2018 and 2019, February and March have seen nothing short of jaw-dropping growth in merchant numbers for Shopify. In those two months alone, Shopify seems to have onboarded more merchants than in the whole of 2018.
The softening you see in April is a result of the lag in the way our systems validate and confirm the data and not a slowdown in Shopify per se. The e-commerce embrace is real.