Even if live streaming has been around for many years, it experienced a tremendous acceleration during the pandemic as people spent on average 30% more time engaging with their smartphones and media devices.
As technology and media consumption remains higher than pre-covid levels, the success of Live Streaming is growing on a global scale. One of the sectors in which it has been more successful is e-commerce: E-commerce consumption accelerated by three years during the pandemic, and the increased competition in the virtual space worked as a catalyst, pushing companies to improve their users’ online experience and catch their attention.
Chinese tech giant Alibaba was the pioneer of Live Streaming in e-commerce. Through the Live Streaming platform Taobao, Alibaba created a new personalized shopping experience, connecting companies with roughly 800 million monthly users who visit Alibaba’s e-commerce site. Taobao’s range of products available in live streaming has been growing massively and the platform is expanding its offer to those categories previously available only offline, such as cars and large appliances.
Live streaming has also become a key feature in the social media landscape. With 2.6 billion downloads, 1.6 billion worldwide users (including Duoyin), and 800 million monthly active users, TikTok is one of the fastest-growing social media platforms ever. What makes TikTok unique is its AI algorithm. Once a video is uploaded on the platform, the AI algorithm uses Natural Language Processing (NLP) to analyze and categorize the video – including audio, hashtag, and images, which allows TikTok to provide users with highly targeted content that they find most interesting. In this way, TikTok’ content can engage its new users for up to 10 minutes, which is three times the capability of Instagram.
Another example is the Amazon-owned platform Twitch, which hosts 91% of all video game streaming and provides the content of more than 4 million broadcasters, monthly. In a high-competitive video games landscape, Twitch differs for the “Just Chatting” category: Streamers can engage with the community and talk to viewers even when they are not playing any game. To understand the impressive growth of the platform, consider that Twitch peaked at around 1.7 billion hours watched in November 2020, versus Facebook’s all-time-high of 250 million in September.
The live streaming market can become the largest entertainment medium. As reported by TechJury, the global live streaming market is surpassing the traditional media ecosystem - such as TV or social media- and it is expected to be worth over $247B by 2027. The growth trajectory is supported by a secular shift in consumer habits, considering that 63% of people aged 18-34 watch live streaming content regularly.
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