The Social Commerce Revolution
THE SOCIAL COMMERCE REVOLUTION
Rev & Reach from PopSpeed Digital [https://revandreach.popspeeddigital.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/03/Rev-and-Reach-Logo.jpg]
In this episode of Rev & Reach, Lori Jo breaks down the rapid rise of social commerce and why brands can no longer rely on websites alone to drive sales. She explains how platforms like TikTok, Instagram, and YouTube are evolving into full storefronts, where customers can discover and purchase products without ever leaving the app.
Lori shares why creator-led selling is outperforming traditional ads, how short-form video fuels impulse buying, and what businesses need to do to stay competitive. From building community to tracking real conversions, this episode offers a practical roadmap for turning social content into revenue.
THEMES DISCUSSED IN THIS EPISODE:
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The rise of social commerce and in-platform purchasing
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Creator-led selling vs. traditional brand advertising
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The role of short-form video in impulse buying behavior
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Why community matters more than algorithm reach
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How to measure success with click-to-purchase tracking
EPISODE HIGHLIGHTS
00:41 — Lori introduces the concept of social commerce and explains how platforms are evolving into full storefronts where customers can purchase without leaving the app.
02:44 — A breakdown of key platforms like TikTok Shop, Instagram Checkout, and YouTube Shopping, and how short-form video is driving impulse purchases.
03:36 — Why creator-led selling outperforms traditional ads, and how authentic voices convert better than polished brand messaging.
06:18 — Why relying on the algorithm is no longer enough, and how building a strong, engaged community is critical for driving sales.
08:22 — The biggest pitfalls of social commerce, including inconsistent content, poor tracking, and failing to analyze what actually drives purchases.
TOP QUOTES
00:41 — “What if your Instagram scroll was also your checkout lane?”
04:15 — “A spokesperson that you hire that’s really polished is not going to be seen as credible compared to the grandma using your skin cream that’s really excited about it.”
06:29 — “You cannot rely on algorithm reach to drive commerce. You can’t do it. You need to build community.”
08:27 — “So social commerce is not a set it and forget it. It is going to require active, ongoing content production.”
Episode Transcript - Click to Open
REV & REACH EPISODE 27 TRANSCRIPT
THE SOCIAL COMMERCE REVOLUTION
00:00
Hello, I’m Lori Jo Vest, thank you so much for joining me for this episode of Rev & Reach where PopSpeed Digital Marketing LLC, the agency I run, we pull the curtain back and tell you how we’re doing what we do, give you great advice on digital marketing and help you keep abreast of trends and what’s happening in the world of digital marketing, to help you get more ROI from your digital marketing efforts. So today we are going to talk about Add to Cart. No website required, the social commerce revolution.
00:41
What if your Instagram scroll was also your checkout lane? This is just so cool. Social media driven sales in the US are projected to surpass $100 billion in 2026 and globally, social commerce revenues should surpass $1 trillion by 2028. That’s crazy. So here’s what we’re going to cover today, and here’s why, if you have a product and you are not selling on social media, you’re missing out. There are so many opportunities out there right now. So what is social commerce, and why is it having a moment? Just like everything else, social platforms are evolving, and they’re evolving into full storefronts, not just discovery tools. And that’s really cool, because what shoppable media does is turn online content, social posts, videos, digital display messages into interactive points of purchase, so the customer can buy products directly from inside the channel. Hit that buy button and keep scrolling.
01:48
And I remember hearing back decades ago that someday we’d be able to stop our television commercial that was playing and hit a shop button and buy the shirt that the woman in the car was wearing. We are not far from that. We are really not far from that. Actually, I saw an interview on television the other day, and this woman had on the most beautiful patterned silk blouse. It was gorgeous. And my husband said, why don’t you see where you can get it, you know, see if you can identify it. Pulled it up, put it in one of my tools, and it pulled up the exact blouse at Nordstrom for $325. That’s beyond my budget, but it was beautiful. Now I know why it was so beautiful. And I mean, it was just so easy, and I could have just bought it right then. So we’re not far from that on our real TVs with smart TVs, but social commerce gives you so many opportunities.
02:44
So the key platforms that you want to watch are TikTok Shop, Instagram Checkout, Pinterest Shopping and YouTube Shopping. And what’s happening is the convergence — they’re calling it convergence — of short form video and impulse buyer behavior. If you sell a product that’s got a low, maybe under $100 price point, think about how often you’ve been scrolling and saw some really cute earrings that were $40 and you wish you could have bought them. Now you can, right? So shoppable video is what’s leading this charge. That means the products are featured with embedded links so they can click right then, learn more and purchase all without leaving the video, which really makes it so much easier to do those impulse buys.
03:36
Creator-led selling is another thing that’s really cool. Instead of brand-led selling, you’ve got creators that are putting together storefronts that when they do a video, you can immediately go buy those items, and then they get the credit. If you are a brand selling products, creators and your everyday social media content creator is a much better, more authentic and more credible salesperson than your ads. It’s just the way things are right now — they convert better. A spokesperson that you hire that’s really polished is not going to be seen as credible compared to the grandma using your skin cream that’s really excited about it and uses her own language and reaches a very specific audience. So think about it in terms of that. With AI-generated media just taking over, brands are focusing heavily on using creators because the AI stuff is just not cutting it. Consumers know it’s AI. They don’t believe it. And if you are selling a product, you don’t want your audience disbelieving the claims you’re making simply because of your images and the tools you’re using to create your content.
04:53
So there’s a lot of things that are happening out there. Live shopping is getting really interesting. It’s still very niche here. We don’t see it quite as often. It’s very big in Asian countries, but right now in the US, what we’re seeing is here and there. You’ll see social media — I’ve seen a lot of Facebook Live events where people are selling things. And there are things like that that happen, but it’s going to get bigger. So if you have the ability to create a live feed that allows your customers to shop, consider that. Give it a try. It might work. And think about this — have you ever bought something directly from a social post? What made you do it? I buy skincare stuff. I have bought clothing. Sometimes it’s disappointing. I have purchased supplements, hair care products, hair dyes, things like that. It is something that people are looking to do. It’s one of those things that helps the consumer see what your product is like when it’s in use, how other people feel about it. It’s a stellar pathway. If you’re selling a product under $100. The one thing you do have to consider with social commerce is that in 2026 users can actually customize their feeds to hide entire categories of content that they don’t want to see.
06:18
Instagram has this thing called Tune Your Algorithm, which allows people to suppress entire industries, topics, types of creators, all kinds of things. What that means is you cannot rely on algorithm reach to drive commerce. You can’t do it. You need to build community. You need to create content that really resonates with your people so that they want to follow you, that they engage with you. Community is so much bigger than just reaching a huge number of people. It’s so much more important. The more competitive the digital space gets, the more important it is that you are actually reaching out to your consumers with things that they want to see and experience.
07:00
The other thing that’s happening, which is kind of cool, is that Threads is emerging as a commerce platform. We had not spent a lot of time on Threads, but it’s actually now a viable platform, cementing its role as a real-time information hub. More people are going there, and the NBA is one of the major brands playing there. So that’s kind of interesting to see who the audience is for the NBA. It’s very wide, very broad. They also have a lot of money. So if they’re posting on Threads and doing some sponsorship on Threads, you can pretty much assume that they have done the research to show that it’s a viable channel. So I would recommend you get more into Threads at least. Add that to your mix of social channels that you play in so that you can see if it’s viable for you and your audience.
08:22
So here are the pitfalls. There’s always going to be the things that don’t work. So social commerce is not a set it and forget it. It is going to require active, ongoing content production. So you can’t do one post a week. You can’t just put something up when, oh, we have a new product, let’s put it up. You’ve got to be creating the community, and you do that by regularly producing content that your audience loves. It takes time, and it takes work. Attribution headaches — you have to be really careful in setting everything up to make sure that you’re actually measuring what drove the purchase, what post or what live led people to go and buy. If you had 16 posts that were selling social commerce posts last month, at the end of the month, you should be looking at that content and analyzing what performed, and then do more of that and less of the things that don’t perform. You’d be surprised how many people keep doing the same thing over and over again and expect different results. It’s not how it works.
09:26
So the other thing is authenticity versus advertorial. If it feels like an ad, it will fail. And you may have heard me say this before if you’ve listened to this podcast, but I would advise you to go look at Scrub Daddy on TikTok if you’re wondering, oh my God, how can I do something authentic, entertaining with something that’s just like a little sponge or whatever your product is. Go to TikTok. Look at what the brands are doing. That’s where you’re going to see the best of the best when it comes to social commerce. I hear it everywhere with a lot of influencers. Oh, I bought this because I saw it on TikTok Shop. It’s where I think it started, and it’s a really great place to go and look and consider what you should be doing to get into social commerce if you’re not there already.
10:15
So the other thing that’s coming up, which is really interesting, is that vague, sweeping corporate sustainability pledges are no longer considered worth the paper they’re printed on. Consumers are actually looking for measurable product benefits that make them feel better about sustainable products that they’re purchasing. So you’ll want to look at that. You’ll want to be specific. If your product is made with all natural ingredients, include that. If your product does not test on animals, include that. If it’s vegetarian or vegan, if it’s a food product, if there’s anything you can say — made in the USA or made in your state — things like that that make not just a broad, sweeping “we believe in sustainability,” but put it into your product information so that people can feel that halo effect. If I buy this product, I’m contributing to a better world. So that’s just a little thing to drop in at the end of this one, because I think you may want to consider that if you’re selling a product that has some kind of a sustainability benefit.
11:21
So last but not least, here’s what I’d like you to do. If you have a product that might be a good possibility for social commerce, audit your current social presence first. Go through all the channels and go, hmm, is there one that I might have made, you know, put a link in and made it shoppable? Is there one post that might have worked? Go back and repost that with the shopping feature in it and see what happens.
11:49
Next thing you can do, another action item, identify a few creators in your niche for a potential collaboration and consider micro influencers. I talked about micro influencers in the last episode and how valuable they are for creating UGC and great content and also spreading the word about your organization. Some of the micro influencers, you get five or six of those in a community and you can get some real traction. So identify two or three of those that you could do a social shopping collaboration with and consider doing that, and then make sure that you’re tracking click to purchase, not just engagement. So make sure that whatever you’re setting up, you’re tracking click to purchase, and you’ve done it in a way that includes the right kinds of links and everything that allows you to do that.
12:37
So I hope this has been helpful. It’s one of those topics that’s just so hot right now that social commerce is taking over, and we all want to buy when we get that urge. And if you’re a seller, you want to be on the other side of that happy, engaged buyer. So that’s all I’ve got for you. I hope you have enjoyed listening to this episode, and we will be back in just a few weeks with another episode to help you get more ROI from your digital marketing efforts.
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