Live Shopping: How to Turn Live Streams Into Sales
Most e-commerce experiences are fundamentally broken in one way: they ask people to trust a collection of static images, a paragraph of copy, and maybe a handful of reviews written by strangers. There’s no conversation. No demonstration. No real human on the other side answering the one question that’s nagging you before you hit “buy.”
Live shopping changes that equation entirely. By layering real-time interaction on top of e-commerce, it lets sellers demonstrate products, answer objections on the spot, and give buyers a frictionless path to purchase — all in the same moment. As a marketing consultant, I’ve always believed that trust and confidence are among the most powerful currencies a company can offer its customers. Live shopping, in my opinion, is one of the best ways to deliver exactly that.
That’s why I invited Laura Lashmar, who runs marketing at eStreamly [https://try.estreamly.com/videocommerce-marco-novo], onto The Special Marcoting Live Show to dig into this topic. Laura’s perspective on when live shopping is right for you — and crucially, when it isn’t — was packed with the kind of honest, practical advice I love bringing to my audience. Here’s what we covered.
You’re Probably Not Ready Yet (And That’s Fine)
I like to start conversations a bit differently these days. Instead of the usual pitch, I’ve become increasingly interested in helping people understand when a product or tool is not the right fit for them. I do this as a consultant — I want people to know whether I’m a good fit to work with them or not — and I think it applies perfectly to live shopping tools.
So I asked Laura straight up: Who is eStreamly not for?
Her answer was refreshingly honest: “If you are fresh out of the gates and you’ve never done live streaming before, we are not right for you. We would really recommend that you start online — on Instagram, on YouTube, those free tools that help you discover if you have a voice.”
The benchmark she offered is roughly five thousand followers, but she was quick to add nuance. In niche industries — she mentioned airsoft as an example — a smaller but deeply engaged community can be more valuable than a large passive one. The real signal isn’t follower count alone. It’s whether people are actually talking to you. Are they commenting? Are they showing up when you go live? Is there genuine back-and-forth?
And even when the audience is there, Laura was honest about the timeline. She estimates it takes about six months of consistent live streaming on a platform like eStreamly before you start hitting a real rhythm and seeing meaningful returns. That’s six months of showing up regularly, not three attempts followed by silence.
I drew an analogy I use often: you don’t start Formula One by jumping into a Formula One car. You begin with free tools, a phone camera, and the willingness to be awkward on screen until you’re not. I talk from experience — I look back at my first videos compared to now, and the difference is enormous. And I’m a stage animal. Even for someone like me, it took time.
Laura reinforced this brilliantly. She pointed out that expensive microphones and fancy cameras — like the ones I have — can actually work against beginners. The expectations rise with the gear, but the output is still a newbie output. Your phone can be fantastic. Start there. Figure out whether you even like being on camera before investing in tools.
Stop Building on Rented Land
Once you’ve validated that you can hold an audience’s attention live, the next strategic move is getting them off platforms you don’t control. Laura framed this as the “rented land” problem, and it’s something I think every entrepreneur building on social media needs to hear.
Instagram can change its algorithm overnight. TikTok can get banned for a day — or longer. Your Facebook account can get flagged and locked with no warning. These platforms are powerful distribution tools, and Laura doesn’t suggest abandoning them. But if they’re your only presence, you’re one policy change away from losing everything you’ve built.
This is where tools like eStreamly become strategically important. The platform lets you stream simultaneously to your own website and to social channels like YouTube and Instagram via RTMP keys. Your website becomes the home base — the place where you own the relationship, the data, and the experience. Social media becomes the megaphone, not the foundation.
I reinforced this with something I think everyone who’s ever watched a live stream on Facebook will recognise: you’re watching, you’re engaged, and then a notification pops up — your friend just got engaged, someone posted a photo — and suddenly the viewer is gone. On your own site, that distraction layer disappears. The viewer is there for you and your products, with nothing competing for their attention.
Friction Is the Silent Killer of Live Shopping Sales
The conversation kept circling back to one theme: friction destroys conversion. Laura and I both hammered this point from different angles, and it’s worth sitting with.
When someone is watching a live stream and they see a product they want, the window of intent is small. If buying requires leaving the stream, navigating to a separate site, creating an account, entering shipping details, and confirming payment — most people won’t do it. They’ll say “I’ll come back later,” and later almost never comes. We all know this because we’ve all done it. Before we were business owners, we were customers. I don’t think anyone was a business owner before being a customer. So think about how you behave when buying something is complicated.
With eStreamly, products appear directly within the live stream. If the seller’s e-commerce is integrated — the platform works with Shopify, BigCommerce, Magento, Salesforce, and others — viewers can check out right there on the video. Apple Pay and similar quick-payment options add another layer of ease. The sale happens in the moment of maximum trust and interest, not twenty minutes later when the moment has passed.
Laura also highlighted an important distinction for affiliate marketers — and this is where I got genuinely excited. I have affiliate links for maybe ten different software tools. Instead of stacking those links in a YouTube video description and hoping people scroll down and click, I could run a live show walking through each tool, demonstrating it in real time, and giving viewers a direct path to purchase — all in one experience. eStreamly supports affiliate link integration via a spreadsheet upload. The viewer sees the product information alongside the video. The checkout doesn’t happen on-screen in this case (since the e-commerce isn’t yours), but the affiliate link stays intact, and the path from “I like this” to “I’m buying this” is dramatically shorter than a list of links buried in a description.
Instead of having ten affiliate links on my videos, I could have just one: “Watch this live show and get all my recommendations.” I genuinely think that’s the smarter play.
Email and SMS: The Unsexy Engine That Makes Live Shopping Work
Here’s the part most people skip when they think about live shopping: getting people to actually show up.
You can plan the best live shopping event in the world, but if your only promotion strategy is an Instagram post, you’re relying on an algorithm that shows your content to roughly one percent of your followers. I know this firsthand — it’s ridiculous. I like to call email marketing “the Rolling Stone of digital marketing.” People keep trying to kill it, but it refuses to die. Laura had an even better line: “It’s the cockroach — it will still be there after everything else.” Maybe not the most glamorous metaphor, but she’s right.
eStreamly builds this directly into its workflow. When viewers subscribe, you capture both email and SMS permissions. You can then craft email campaigns with an embedded countdown to your next live event. That countdown code is clever: it transforms into the actual live player when the event starts, and the link remains functional afterward so viewers can watch the replay. It’s one persistent link that adapts to wherever the viewer is in the timeline.
The SMS piece is equally practical. A text message five minutes before you go live cuts through the noise in a way that social media posts simply cannot. People genuinely intend to watch your live but forget because life happens — they’re at the store, they’re driving, their kids need something. A well-timed text is the nudge that turns intention into attendance.
Laura also mentioned an Instagram-specific feature: you can prompt followers to drop a keyword like “shop” in the comments of a pre-event post, and eStreamly automatically sends them a DM with a link to the live. It’s an organic audience migration tool — moving people from Instagram’s rented land to your owned experience without paid ads.
I also talked about what I do with my students when teaching the inbound process: the last step is turning a customer into an ambassador. There are two things about this. First, you don’t recommend something that would hurt your reputation — you only share what you genuinely trust. Second, people trust a recommendation from a friend or someone knowledgeable far more than any advertisement. I like to call it “the after-vacations effect.” When you visit a place that exceeds your expectations, you come home and can’t stop talking about it — the hotel, the restaurant, the food, the view. We like being seen as a source of good recommendations. Having the ability to share a live shopping experience taps into exactly that dynamic.
Authenticity Sells More Than Perfection
The conversation took an interesting turn when Laura and I started talking about what happens when things go wrong on a live stream. I shared my own greatest hits of live fails — broadcasting for twenty minutes with the microphone off (what I call “doing a Charlie Chaplin”), my image freezing mid-stream in a ridiculous pose during the early COVID days when platforms were glitchy. I couldn’t stop laughing at myself frozen on screen like that. At this point, I’m okay with all the live streaming failures.
Laura’s take was that this vulnerability is actually a competitive advantage, especially in an era flooded with AI-generated content. “We know that user-generated content drives sales,” she said. “Well, going live is like doing that on steroids.” When a product demo doesn’t go perfectly, when the presenter fumbles, when something unexpected happens — that’s proof that what you’re watching is real. And real is becoming increasingly rare and increasingly valuable.
I’ve always said that live streaming is, without question, the most risky content format. It’s like being at the circus on top of the high wire without a safety net — you never know what may happen. But that vulnerability is something I believe audiences genuinely appreciate and understand.
But Laura drew an important line between authentic vulnerability and poor brand management. I brought up a restaurant here in the north of Portugal that has wildly polarised reviews — lots of five stars, but also one and two star ratings — and when they get bad reviews, they reply rudely. My thought is: if someone reacts that badly in a public setting, how would they deal with me if there’s a warranty issue or a problem with my order? Probably not well.
Laura’s response was nuanced and genuinely funny. She told me about a café near her in England that was famous specifically for being rude, with signs everywhere warning customers about their behaviour, and it was wildly popular because that rudeness was the brand. The lesson isn’t “always be nice.” It’s “know who you are, be consistent, and make sure your audience expects what they’re getting.” If you’re getting five stars and one stars with huge gulfs between them, your problem isn’t trolls — it’s your messaging attracting the wrong audience.
The Real Value Is in Listening
One underrated benefit of live shopping that both Laura and I emphasised is the feedback loop. When someone comments during a live asking if a shirt comes in orange and it doesn’t, that’s not just a missed sale — it’s market research. It’s a potential product opportunity delivered directly from your target customer, in real time, for free.
Laura put it bluntly: “Even if you get no sales from it, you are understanding something really important — that you haven’t got your product right, or you haven’t got your audience right. One of those two things is happening in that moment. Everything is telling you something. You’ve just got to be willing to listen.”
That resonated with me deeply. When you address someone’s question live, they feel important. They feel heard. Sometimes a comment that sounds like a critique is actually a business opportunity in plain sight.
Plan Like a Retailer, Not a Content Creator
During the show, Laura gave us a backstage walkthrough of eStreamly, and it revealed something important about the mindset shift live shopping requires. This isn’t just going live and chatting — it’s building a store experience inside a live stream.
Laura walked through the event planning interface, where sellers create upcoming events, assign products to them, and manage interactivity. Her recommendation for a thirty-minute live was five to ten products — enough to showcase meaningfully without overwhelming the viewer. The analogy she used was a physical store: a badly laid-out shop with too much crammed in drives people away. Your live stream is no different. And as I pointed out, the complexity of the product matters too — talking about a pen is very different from talking about a cell phone.
She also stressed the importance of choosing the right time to go live, and her advice was refreshingly non-prescriptive. There’s no universal “best time.” If your audience is young mothers, weekday evenings after bedtime make sense. If you’re targeting professionals, a weekday slot works better. If you’re doing an F1 follow-up, probably right after the race. The only way to know for sure is to ask your audience — I suggested using LinkedIn polls for this — and then experiment within the window they give you. Maybe Tuesdays beat Thursdays. Maybe 7:30 outperforms 8:30. You won’t know until you test. But Laura was clear: avoid guesswork or you risk going live to an empty room, which is incredibly frustrating.
The distribution features round out the picture. eStreamly auto-populates your website with upcoming and past lives, provides embed codes for placing streams anywhere on your site, and generates email-friendly code that drops into HubSpot, MailChimp, or any HTML-capable email tool as a lightweight GIF-like embed that doesn’t bloat your email size. You can even set a delayed start time to trim the awkward “waiting for people to join” opening from your replays — a detail I thought was genuinely clever.
I also floated an idea during the show that I’m still thinking about: I have a Substack with two publications, and I was wondering if I could embed eStreamly live shows there to showcase my affiliate tools. Laura wasn’t sure about Substack’s embed compatibility but promised to look into it. The challenge is that Substack lets you schedule live content and provides a page, but working with custom embed code is a different story. It’s something I want to figure out, because instead of scattering affiliate links across video descriptions, having one dedicated live shopping experience for my tool recommendations feels like the smarter, more effective approach.
The Long-Form vs. Short-Form Future
Near the end of our conversation, Laura and I touched on something I find increasingly fascinating: the divergence between long-form and short-form content platforms. Social media sites are splitting. You’ve got the long-form spaces — Substack, Medium, Reddit — where deeper, more relational content lives. And then you’ve got the short-form hook spaces like Instagram and TikTok.
Laura’s prediction is that both will grow, but the audiences and the style of engagement will be fundamentally different. The era of creating one piece of content and blasting it identically across every platform is ending. Long-form spaces will foster deeper relationships. Short-form spaces will deliver enjoyment and discovery. But the relationship-building — the kind that actually drives live shopping sales — will increasingly happen in long-form environments.
I pushed back on the narrative I hear constantly that one format is “killing” another. Blogging is dead? Take a look at Substack and talk to me again. I’ve also been noticing a growing number of Portuguese-speaking users on Substack, which tells me the platform is gaining real traction beyond the English-speaking world. These shifts matter for anyone thinking about where to invest their live shopping energy.
Live Shopping Is a Long Game Worth Playing
Live shopping isn’t a hack. It’s not going to transform your business overnight, and Laura was admirably honest about that throughout our conversation. It takes an existing audience, a commitment to showing up consistently for at least six months, and a willingness to be imperfect on camera.
But for entrepreneurs and solopreneurs who have built a community and are looking for a way to convert trust into transactions without the friction of traditional e-commerce, it’s one of the most compelling formats available right now. You get to demonstrate products in real time, answer objections before they become deal-breakers, build deeper relationships with your audience, and collect the kind of direct feedback that most businesses pay consultants to gather. If you’ve been treating live streaming as just another content format, it might be time to think of it as what it really is: a storefront with a personality.
Key Takeaways
Live shopping works best when you’ve already built an audience and proven you can hold attention on free platforms — don’t invest in tools before you’ve earned the right to use them. Own your audience by bringing them to your website rather than relying solely on social media, and reduce every possible friction point between “I want this” and “I bought this.” Email and SMS remain the most reliable way to get people to show up to live events, and the authenticity of live — including the inevitable mishaps — is becoming a genuine competitive advantage in a world increasingly saturated with polished AI content. Commit to six months, experiment with timing, listen to your audience’s feedback like it’s gold, and treat every live stream like you’re building a store experience, not just creating content.
Laura’s Favourites
📚 Book: The Secret Life of Bees
🎬 Film: The Royal Tenenbaums (all-time favourite) / Conclave (most recent)
📺 TV Show: Stumble — a comedy parody of a fly-on-the-wall cheerleading documentary
🛠️ Tool: Claude AI
🔁 Habit: Hand-building ceramics
Find Mora About Laura and eStreamLy
https://try.estreamly.com/videocommerce-marco-novo [https://try.estreamly.com/videocommerce-marco-novo] (affiliate)
https://www.linkedin.com/in/lauralashmar/
https://www.linkedin.com/company/estreamly
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