"TikTok is launching an e-commerce business in the U.S. to sell made-in-China goods to consumers, stepping up its rivalry with popular shopping platforms Shein and Temu.
The video-sharing platform will make the program available in its biggest market in early August, people familiar with the plan said, as it seeks to replicate the American success of the two China-founded rivals.
Similar to Amazon.com's "Sold by Amazon" program, TikTok will store and ship items -- including clothes, electronics and kitchen gadgets -- on behalf of manufacturers and merchants in China. It also will handle marketing, transactions, logistics and after-sale services.
The move broadens the e-commerce strategy of TikTok, which has struggled with its initial plans to develop a third-party sellers' platform in the U.S. It delayed a wider launch of that service because American merchants were reluctant to join amid political uncertainty over the app's future. TikTok faces rising scrutiny in Washington, where officials and lawmakers have branded it a national security risk.
TikTok is now building an Amazon-like marketplace, the TikTok Shop Shopping Center, which integrates different channels where users can view and buy goods into one single page. Users can review merchandise both sold through TikTok's program and directly by external retailers.
TikTok's foray into the new e-commerce model is aimed at expanding its seller ecosystem to earn more money from its popular video app and diversify beyond advertising sales. The move follows the rise of PDD Holdings' Temu and fast-fashion retailer Shein -- which made a $800 million profit in 2022 -- and could add another test for Amazon.
TikTok aims to quadruple the gross merchandise value, or the total transaction amount of goods on the platform, to $20 billion globally this year from less than $5 billion last year, the people said.
TikTok Shop, the app's e-commerce unit, will keep its top priority on empowering local businesses to build their presence on the platform, said a spokesperson at the unit.
Temu and Shein didn't respond to requests for comment.
A clutch of e-commerce sellers including Temu, Alibaba Group Holding's AliExpress and Shopee, owned by Singapore-headquartered Sea, have rolled out similar programs around the world since last year, leveraging China's position as the world's factory floor to offer lower price goods.
"The e-commerce landscape this year is simply that all platforms are adopting this new model," a TikTok merchant manager told an audience of hundreds who attended an online roadshow last week.
"TikTok's advantage over peer platforms [Temu] and [Shein] is that we have one billion monthly active users globally," he said. Those two shopping platforms combined have one-fifth of TikTok's global user base, according to market intelligence firm Sensor Tower.
Executives at TikTok, owned by Beijing-based ByteDance, tasked its e-commerce team back in March with examining the business models of its fast-growing rivals, people familiar with the matter said. Two months later, it launched its own version in Saudi Arabia and the U.K.
The move came after many Chinese merchants, on using its third-party sellers' platform, struggled to provide adequate customer service and grow their profit, the people said. TikTok also sought to increase control over goods and services provided on its platform as complaints about fakes and scams caused it a headache, they said.
Under what it calls a "full-service model," TikTok will pay Chinese suppliers only after finding buyers in the U.S. and will return unpopular items to avoid being stuck with inventory, some of the people said.
It also plans to open the new program to manufacturers and merchants outside China in the future as it builds up international settlement and logistics systems, the people said.
Analysts say its rollout in the U.S. could add to the pressure TikTok already faces from regulators and competitors. The Biden administration has said TikTok needs to sell its U.S. operations or face a ban, citing concerns that China could access Americans' user data. TikTok has repeatedly denied receiving Chinese government requests for user data and said it wouldn't respond if asked.
"It's an uphill battle for TikTok because not only is the competition fierce, but the challenges are also greater for TikTok if it actually does well," said Ivy Yang, a tech analyst who formerly worked for e-commerce behemoth Alibaba.
TikTok also faces practical challenges because retailing requires different expertise, talents and business thinking from a social-media platform, analysts say. It will need to invest heavily in warehousing, supply-chain management and after-sales service." [1]
The Chinese company TikTok has a lot of problems in the US because it is Chinese. Now TikTok is trying to make lemonade out of this lemon by profiting from cheap Chinese goods. Good move, we will buy the shares of those who invested in TikTok.
1. TikTok Wants to Sell Americans China Goods. Huang, Raffaele.
Wall Street Journal, Eastern edition; New York, N.Y. [New York, N.Y]. 26 July 2023: B.1.
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