In a way, live shopping — a host on screen, holding up products during a limited time only sale — seems reminiscent of an analog past, when drowsy shoppers would lounge on the couch, flicking between QVC and HSN.  
 
But now, thanks in part to influencers who have forged an intimate connection with their fanbase, live shopping has become big business. In China, it’stransformed the way people buy and sell.” Yet, in the West, adoption has been slower—until now. With live shopping app Whatnot reaching a staggering $5 billion valuation and major players like TikTok, Amazon, and Walmart investing heavily in the space, it’s clear that live shopping isn’t just a trend—it’s a retail transformation. Gary Vaynerchuk, CEO of VaynerMedia and marketing expert, has predicted that live shopping on social media has the potential to disrupt multiple industries. 

How Is Live Shopping Different Than Targeted Advertising? 

Live shopping rose to prominence during the COVID-19 pandemic, often with influencers taking advantage of the moment to improvise and sell their own lines or hosting DIY sales from their own closets or homes. The trend took off in China at that time, as brands partnered with influencers for high-tech, fully staged live shopping shows. Today, brands are becoming a trusted partner and producer in live shopping events, turning these moments into a key part of the marketing funnel. 

Unlike a static shopping interface, live shopping blends entertainment, real-time engagement, and e-commerce into a single experience. Instead of browsing static product pages on their own time, consumers can engage in live shopping, which allows for: 

  • Real-time interaction – Shoppers can ask questions, get live demonstrations, and see products in action before making a purchase. 
  • Entertainment value – Engaging hosts, dynamic content, flash sales and gamification, such as quizzes or flash deals based on a certain behavior, are all ways to keep consumers hooked. 
  • AI-driven personalization – Platforms like Shein and Temu use AI to tailor recommendations, offering a highly personalized shopping experience. 

The TikTok Effect: Bridging East and West 

While live shopping in the US has yet to reach China’s scale, TikTok has played a pivotal role in its growing adoption. The platform has helped introduce live shopping to Western audiences, though the trending format is expanding beyond social media-exclusive spaces. Retailers and brands are integrating live shopping into their own ecosystems, leveraging influencers, interactive features, and exclusive drops on their owned and operated platforms to drive sales. 

Live Shopping Success Stories 

1. Walmart Live 

Walmart has pioneered shoppable livestreams across TikTok, YouTube, and its own app. By focusing on niche audiences—beauty enthusiasts, tech lovers, and fashion shoppers—the retail giant has driven targeted engagement and increased conversions. Not only does Walmart Live partner with trusted influencers, but they also collaborate with legendary talent, like Dolly Parton, for marquee shopping events. 

2. Amazon Live

Amazon has seamlessly integrated live shopping into its ecosystem, particularly around major events like Prime Day. By using trusted creators and brand ambassadors, including A-listers like Jennifer Hudson and Martha Stewart to demo products in real time, Amazon has turned shopping into a tune-in event. 

3. L’Oréal 

L’Oréal has found success with tutorial-based live shopping, using AR try-ons and interactive demos to educate and convert consumers. For example, L’Oreal surpassed $1 million in sales on TikTok Shop’s Super Brand Day in the UK, surpassing expectations, and has also rolled out live shopping experiences throughout the globe. Hyper focusing on local markets can also be key for brands to optimize engagement, capitalize on cultural touchstones or moments, and utilize influencers with a large regional following.

Considerations for Brands Exploring Live Shopping 

Brands looking to enter the live shopping space can consider the following strategies: 

  • Find the right platform: TikTok, Instagram, and YouTube Live offer built-in audiences, while brands can also host events on their own platforms. High-touch, immersive content is great for industries like beauty, fashion, cookware, and home goods, where demos and try-ons can help consumers fully understand the item. 
  • Create event-driven moments: Limited-time deals, exclusive drops, and flash sales create urgency and drive immediate purchases. 
  • Maximize interactivity: Live Q&As, polls, and real-time reactions turn passive viewers into active participants. 
  • Leverage influencers: Partnering with trusted creators adds credibility and boosts conversion rates, particularly with micro-influencers who have highly engaged audiences and who excel at playing host and brand ambassador.  
  • Repurpose live content: Brands can save and repackage livestreams for on-demand viewing, social media cuts, and subscriber content to extend reach and engagement beyond the live event. 

The Future of Live Shopping 

As AI and e-commerce technology continue to evolve, live shopping is poised to become a core component of the retail experience. The brands that embrace this shift—combining real-time engagement with interactive, high-quality content—will be the ones that not only stay relevant but thrive in the new era of digital commerce.  
 
Creative Circle helps brands navigate this shift, connecting them with top-tier talent to build immersive commerce experiences or consult on the appropriate strategy. From social media optimization and video production to interactive content design and platform efficiencies, Creative Circle’s network of creative professionals ensures brands have the expertise to stay ahead in an evolving e-commerce landscape.

Looking for the talent who can help you execute a live shopping strategy? Businesses diving into live shopping opportunities are incorporating these roles to power their project teams:

  • Producer: Manages the technical aspects of the live stream, including camera work, lighting, and sound, ensuring a smooth and professional broadcast.
  • Content Creator: Develops the script, talking points, and visual content for the live event, ensuring the presentation is engaging and informative.
  • Social Media Manager: Promotes the live shopping event across various social media platforms, engages with the audience before, during, and after the event, and monitors feedback.
  • E-commerce Manager: Oversees the integration of the live shopping platform with the brand’s e-commerce site, ensuring a seamless shopping experience for viewers.
  • Marketing and Data Analyst: Tracks and analyzes metrics from the live shopping event to measure success and identify areas for improvement.
  • Marketing Strategist: Develops and implements marketing strategies to maximize reach and engagement for the live shopping event

Creative Circle has a network of over 1 million creative and marketing experts who can help operationalize online retail shopping experiences for your brand. Let’s get started.

About the Author: Anna Davies is a Creative Circle freelancer who specializes in personal finance, investing, fintech, and startups. She has worked with WeWork, Happy Money, and Haven Life —plus Fortune 500 companies such as Goldman Sachs, American Express, Citi, and Chase. Davies has also collaborated and ghostwritten for multiple New York Times bestsellers. 

Private label brands continue to go from room to room, and it looks like they might take over more than half the house. In fact, more than 50 percent of grocery shoppers have bought more private brands over the past year, and almost half of surveyed shoppers plan to buy more private brands this year and beyond.

“Private label” refers to products produced by a third-party manufacturer and sold under a retailer’s brand, where the retailer manages the product’s specifications, advertising, marketing, packaging, pricing, and store placement. These brands are also a significant contributor to e-commerce, driving online sales for big box retailers like Costco, Target, Trader Joe’s, Walmart, and Whole Foods.

But how does private labelling work? Macy’s, for example, sells hundreds of well-known and much-loved brands, both in-store and online. If you’re a Macy’s shopper and you’re wearing something from Club Room or I.N.C., you are attired in one of the store’s more than 25 private labels.

Increasing Competition for Popular Brands

Macy’s and other retailers’ private labels provide customers with high-quality branded goods at lower price points. Macy’s Club Room, for example, competes with well-known brands such as Lacoste, Ralph Lauren Polo, and Tommy Bahama, while their I.N.C. line’s all-around prêt-à-porter clothing is sold alongside popular labels like Aldo, DKNY, and Lucky (among many, many others). About 16 percent of Macy’s fiscal 2022 sales of $25.4B came from private brands, and Macy’s continues to examine its private brand portfolio to identify underserved aesthetic and customer profile gaps.

The benefit for Macy’s and other retailers is obvious: by offering well-made, less-expensive alternatives to established brands, the store retains customers whose budgets might not permit them to purchase more expensive brands, such as Brooks Brothers and Dolce & Gabbana, providing them with similar, well-made yet more affordable items. Shoppers are inclined to trust these private labels, since they’re sold by a renowned retailer. Plus, every private label product Macy’s sells means the store doesn’t have to split sales with a national or international brand.

At supermarkets and big box retailers with in-store groceries, too, private label is the new key to the kingdom. Driven by increased food prices and growing sustainability concerns, more shoppers than ever are finding their way to private label brands on supermarket shelves. Private label products actually accounted for 20.7% of U.S. grocery industry unit sales in 2023, a record level, gaining significant ground on established national brands in terms of units sold.

Trader Joe’s has long been the dominant business model for sales of private label products, with Target and Walmart looking to compete with the grocery chain’s iconic brands like “Trader Giotto” beloved by consumers for their internationally inspired dishes with private labels of their own. Target’s private label food brands include Good & Gather and Market Pantry, while Walmart recently announced the launch of bettergoods, their private label brand that aims to make “quality, trend-forward, and chef-inspired food approachable and affordable.” bettergoods is Walmart’s biggest private label brand launch in two decades, which means investment in this area is only growing.

Top-shelf Attraction

Beyond lower prices, how do private labels compete with national brands that already have an established customer base? These brands have to get creative to capture consumer attention, both in-store and online, in order to draw shoppers away from the legacy brands they’ve likely known and purchased for years. Essentially, private label brands face the complex challenge of remaining adjacent to their parent retailer’s overall brand identity while establishing a niche of their own to compete with the vast array of products in their particular category. It’s a battle for digital and physical shelf space that requires careful consideration.

Marketing and creative strategy is what truly determines the success of leading private label brands at the end of the day, especially when it comes to customer acquisition. Advertising, branding, campaigns, consumer insights, coupon design, e-commerce activation, and packaging design are all make-or-break opportunities in this arena, but packaging can often be the foot-in-the-door any private label needs.

Eyes on the Prize

Up and down the supermarket aisle, packaging is everything, and retailers need to create packaging that literally stands out — both in-person and on-screen. Private-label packages historically mimicked the look and feel of their competitors, but retailers today are looking to brand these products in a new way that captures the attention of customers while simultaneously communicating the benefits and quality of the brand. This is an especially important driver of brand reputation in clothing and grocery where customers are looking beyond price alone to the quality of ingredients and materials and their sustainability, encompassing everything from fair trade sourcing and ethical manufacturing to the use of recycled materials.

This means packaging designers are now tasked with label copy that dovetails with package visuals — a creative problem-solver’s dream. It’s true shoppers are still drawn to singular packaging, especially when it comes to color and design, but once the package is in their hands today’s consumer is looking for facts and figures that convince them to bring the product to checkout. Designing the perfect package for a private label product, then putting it all together and getting the product into stores, requires precise planning. The same of course also applies to e-commerce initiatives to market and sell private labels via digital channels, meaning the competition is fierce both in-store and online.

Launching in Style

Once a private label product is ready to roll, how do industry leaders effectively roll it out? Best-in-class private label brands need to tell a product story that concisely conveys their products’ unique value to the everyday consumer. Digital go-to-market strategies can leverage channels like product landing pages, press releases, blog articles, paid and organic social media campaigns, and so much more. Leading companies in the space even work with production teams to create content for more traditional commercial ads to drive awareness.

The old adage, you never get a second chance to make a first impression, is certainly a truism when it comes to new launches. Beyond native content, retailers looking to promote private labels, particularly when it comes to clothing and food, often work with influencers. Getting a pair of private label boots on the feet of a celebrity attending Coachella or an array of products on the kitchen island of a cooking show goes a long way to building a brand – and selling it. It’s an entirely customer-centric process, and it has to be done right.

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Bottomline

Private labels continue to fill the room, and the door is wide open. One might even say it’s getting mighty crowded, as customers come to expect the exact same things from private label brands they expect from legacy brands. These brands have to take customers on the same journey their legacy competitors do, both in brick-and-mortar and virtual settings, which means launching and managing a private label brand and its products requires heavy creative support.

That’s where Creative Circle comes in. We are a talent-driven organization that provides our clients with the right creative and marketing solutions to support your branding, packaging, and marketing projects. Whether you need project management, content creation, copywriting and editing, design, or art direction (including 3D, animation, and videography), we have the right talent to help you achieve your goals and take your brand to new heights. We are more than just a staffing agency; we are a transformative partner who can drive meaningful results for your private label brand. Let us help you get your products out the door — and onto the top shelves.