Source: Temu
With inflation and a precarious economy driving people to look for deals, more U.S. customers are visiting dollar stores. The U.S. dollar store vertical, however, may be looking at competition from an even cheaper offering as value retail app Temu continues making inroads in the U.S. market.
The China-based, U.S. headquartered business has become the most downloaded app from both Google Play and Apple, and some customers have taken to calling it “the new dollar store” according to Business Insider. The app, which lets customers buy direct from sellers mostly in China, has experienced viral success among social media users and influencers, who post “haul videos” on websites like YouTube showcasing the low-priced products they were able to purchase from the app.
Temu has caught on quickly with U.S. consumers since its September 2022 launch. Part of the application’s ability to scale its audience so quickly may result from its model for getting new sign-ups. The company launched a social media campaign allowing users to earn credits by convincing others to sign up to the service, and those credits can be used to purchase goods from the app, allowing successful “recruiters” to get product for free.
Temu has also spared no expense on stateside advertising. The platform ran ad spots in the first and third quarters of the Super Bowl earlier this year. The advertisements made it the most-seen brand during and immediately after the Super Bowl, cross-platform TV measurement service iSpot.tv told RetailWire at the time.
Deep discount websites and apps are not a new phenomenon. U.S. niche daily deal website Woot launched in 2004 and was acquired by Amazon.com in 2010. In recent years, companies such as Wish and AliExpress (the discount e-commerce platform owned by Alibaba) have appeared and given customers access to cheap, factory-direct products from China. The unpredictability in product quality and experience with both platforms has prompted users and journalists to urge customers to proceed with caution when shopping them.
Temu recently faced similarly serious criticisms in a Time article, which reported it was developing a reputation for “undelivered packages, mysterious charges, incorrect orders, and unresponsive customer service.”
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