Report shows third-party sellers accelerating enterprise marketplace growth


Report shows third-party sellers accelerating enterprise marketplace growth

A new 2021 Enterprise Marketplace Seller Report which aggregates data from more than 50,000 sellers, 60 million products, and billions of dollars in GMV shows that , marketplaces have grown at more than double the rate of eCommerce over the past year. However, despite these impressive numbers, the world of marketplace sellers remains mysterious to many retailers. This lack of understanding limits marketplace operators in their efforts to grow and expand, as each new seller provides a GMV contribution of nearly US $110,000 on average. The report offers retailers launching and scaling enterprise marketplaces to better understand seller profiles and craft effective plans for seller onboarding, retention and growth.

“The acceleration of the enterprise marketplace model is expanding opportunities for incumbent retailers and third-party sellers alike to come together and thrive in a highly competitive eCommerce environment,” said Adrien Nussenbaum, co-founder and co-CEO of Mirakl. “The data from this new report quantifies that in addition to gaining new GMV from each new third-party seller, sellers are key to retailer marketplaces expanding their assortment faster, with greater differentiation, and higher customer satisfaction than through traditional eCommerce models alone.”

The Enterprise Marketplace Seller Report’s key findings include:

  • Enterprise marketplace sellers are diverse, representing three main business models: There are three primary types of sellers: marketplace native sellers (generating 63 per cent of GMV across all enterprise marketplaces in Q1 2021), brand sellers (generating 20 per cent of GMV), and eCommerce retailers (generating 17 per cent of GMV). The variety allows retailers to more precisely tune and curate the composition of their marketplaces to better serve the needs of their shoppers.
  • Large sellers are prevalent, but a wave of small and medium-size sellers are on the rise: While large sellers accounted for 88 per cent of marketplace GMV during the first quarter of 2021, small-and medium-sized sellers have doubled their GMV contribution in that same period and tripled in the past year. Small-to mid-sized sellers will continue to be a force in the coming years as retailers look for unique product selections. The momentum of enterprise marketplaces is reflected in the increasing rush of sellers online: More than a third (36 per cent) of sellers joined enterprise marketplaces in just the last 15 months.
  • Nearly half of all sellers cover multiple marketplaces: Cross-marketplace coverage is on the rise, as sellers are seeking – and finding – expansion opportunities by partnering with leading retailers. Nearly half (47 per cent) of sellers are now covering multiple marketplaces, up from 38 per cent the previous year. As they expand, however, they proactively differentiate their assortment to match the needs of each partner: 74 per cent of these sellers have different catalogues per marketplace.
  • Third-party sellers outperform traditional eCommerce benchmarks for assortment quality and customer service: Experienced sellers earn an impressive 4.5 out of 5 rating from highly satisfied shoppers. They also have lower refund rates (50 per cent lower than traditional eCommerce) and fewer customer service inquiries per order than their first-party seller peers.
  • Marketplace sellers onboard quickly, and rapidly grow GMV for retailers: Time-to-value is accelerating for marketplace sellers. The fastest 25 per cent of sellers averaged only five calendar days of total onboarding, from first contact to live marketplace offer, with catalog integration taking as little as a single day. A retention rate of 93 per cent reflects a lasting relationship between seller and marketplace. The report also highlights that sellers tend to expand to additional marketplaces after succeeding on their first marketplace, leading to an environment where sellers are treated like marketplace customers.

“We are very, very happy with the quarter-over-quarter and month-over-month growth we are seeing in the marketplace,” said Timothy Baxter, CEO of Express, Inc.

“Express’s marketplace accounted for 30 per cent of my company’s sales during the holiday season, and most customers who come through the site are new to our brand,” stated Rocky Collins, founder and CEO of CALI HNDSME, a seller on Express’s enterprise marketplace.

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