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How-To Guide: Drive Sales on Social Media with Live Sales

Hello Seller Community, my name is Katie from the Square Account Management team! I work with Square’s Retail businesses to strategize on their growth, and how to make the most of Square’s product ecosystem. 

 

By now, many of you have created an online store and connected with your communities online. As many other businesses increase their presence on social media via Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram — the question remains: What else can I do to engage with my customers?

 

One social selling strategy that is gaining traction is selling on a Live Sale — essentially the Home Shopping Network run by YOU! A number of Square sellers are using social media in clever ways to reach out to customers that are shopping from home. Read on for an inspiring example and a step-by-step guide that you can apply to your business.

 

If you've never participated in a Live Sale, check out this recent event hosted by fellow Seller Community member @DinaLRosenberg and Amityville Apothecary. To view, sign into your Instagram account and head over to their IGTV tab!

 

Screenshot 2020-06-26 at 4.20.47 PM.png

 

Guide on How to Conduct a Live Sale

 

Phase One: Prepare

 

  1. Pick your best sales channel that has live capabilities. Facebook Live and Instagram Live work well, but you can also create a private invite on Zoom to share with your followers.
  2. Schedule a date and time that you’ll conduct your live sale. Give yourself enough time to promote it in your social media accounts (1-2 weeks out).
  3. Decide what inventory you want to sell during your live sale, and list out what order you will present your items during the sale. You can use a spreadsheet or Square inventory to list out what you have, and how many of each size.
  4. Decide how your customers will pay. Square Invoices or CashApp are great ways to collect funds.
  5. Get an assistant (or a few!) to help you during the live sale, and make sure they know the “run of show”  inventory list, how to keep track of sales, and how to respond to the live comments.
  6. Promote your sale across all your channels (email marketing, Facebook groups, Facebook stories, Instagram posts and stories) and be sure to mention what time zone, which social media platform, how your customers will tune in and shop, and what amazing deals you will offer on what kinds of items.
  7. Keep promoting, previewing your items with photos or videos.
  8. Practice your sale — set up your computer or phone camera, make your background pretty, test lighting, and make sure your wifi/cellular can handle live streaming.

 

Phase Two: Put Your Plan into Effect

 

 

  1. Day of the Sale: line up your items (on hangers, or on a table) in the order you want to present them.  You may even want to give them a number so your customers know which item they are asking for.
  2. Keep reminding your followers about the sale and when it starts that day.
  3. When you go live:
    • Introduce yourself, your store, your helpers, and how long the sale lasts.
    • Tell your customers how to claim an item:
      • They can put in the comments “I want the pink shirt in a size small” or “#4, size medium” for instance.
      • If someone is new to following you, they may have to put down their email address in the comments section.
      • How you will invoice them through Square after the show.
      • How quickly they need to pay the invoice to get the items they requested. You can incentivize faster payment with free shipping or a free gift.
  4. During the sale, you’ll hold up each item, describe it, and state the price. You can even answer live commented questions to help your customers understand the product (like sizing or the feel of the fabric).
  5. While you are live on camera, your assistant will be checking the comments, and adding items to the customers’  ‘buy list’, which you can do in Square Invoices, using Open Tickets in Square POS, or with pen and paper. You may even decide to start packing up items into boxes to be shipped during the sale, awaiting their payment.
  6. At the end of the sale, you will create Square Invoices to send to your customers.
  7. When they have paid, you can print a shipping label through a partner like Shippo, or take your packages to the post office to ship.
  8. Keep positive! You may have technical difficulties, or customers not understanding how to do the sale.  It is OK!  You will refine the sale each time.
  9. Set a date for your next sale and do it again!

 

Additional Tools and Resources:

  • Send Square Invoices Online — Learn more about Square Invoices and view step-by-steps on how to create them from the online Square Dashboard.
  • Cash App — You can download Cash App from that link to send and receive funds.
  • CommentSold — Automate inventory, create waitlists and remove the busywork involved with shipping products to your customers. Take payments online with Square.
  • Shippo — Create, purchase and print shipping labels all from your computer.

 

Feel free to click reply below and let us know of any questions, best practices, and definitely keep us posted on how it's going!

 

Curious to learn more about this seller? Check out this post: Seller Spotlight: Meet Amityville Apothecary.

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Admin

Thank you for putting this together @katiem and for sharing @DinaLRosenberg! I enjoyed learning how this works. Wishing you both a fantastic weekend! 🙌

️ Tom | he/him
Seller Community Manager | Square, Inc.
Find step-by-step help in our Support Center
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We started doing this during this when our shop was shut down.  We used it to get rid of old inventory at a lower price so we had fresh inventory when we reopened.  As no one wants to buy sweaters in June.  We then used comment sold.  It is a lot of work getting everything in the system, but it is well worth it.  Although it might seem pricy, we have saved money in labour and cut down on the errors.  

Our shop is now open we continue to do the lives, as it helps keep our shop relevant.  They are a great advertising tool to get people to come shop with us even if they don't purchase anything during the live.  If you offer in store pick up you will help generate more traffic to your shop.  Plus if people return items generally they spend more than they returned.  

We had a great June which I believe had a lot to do with the lives, and a lot of hard work. 

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Admin

Thank you for sharing how you use Live Sales @elementstyle! Would you like to share Instagram handle? Are you able to host the Live Sales by yourself or do you need an extra pair of hands? 

️ Helen
Seller Community Manager

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I been adding my products to social media and other websites and I get likes but nobody buys my products. I want to know what do I need to do to get clients.

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Square Community Moderator

Hey @ForeverCandles1,

 

I moved your post to an existing thread from one of our Account Managers on how to drive sales with social media.

 

Check out the details above!

Ashley C
Community Moderator, Square
Sign in and click Mark as Best Answer if my reply answers your question.
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Thank you for the information. 

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This was excellent information! I will give it a try and see how it goes! Being shutdown still in California this might really be helpful! 

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Admin

Glad to hear the information was helpful, @KatesPlaceKeep us posted on how it goes, and feel free to share links to your social media profiles here as it picks up. 🙏

️ Tom | he/him
Seller Community Manager | Square, Inc.
Find step-by-step help in our Support Center
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Rather than sending invoices why not just direct them to the online store and let them purchase directly from the website?

 

Tell them how to open another window and your website...

 

Is there a drawback to this?

 

Thanks

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Admin

I think that could work as well, @StudioBllc — good point! The two things that come to my mind for consideration are:

  1. If you have one-of-a-kind and/or multiples of an item, double check to make sure your inventory amounts are set correctly before the event.
  2. Consider how much traffic your online store / website gets. If you're directing folks to go make a purchase during the live event, there may be a chance someone else already placed an order resulting with the item you're selling in real time already being unavailable.

Hope this helps with your decision. If you end up trying this out, please do let us know how it goes! 🙏

️ Tom | he/him
Seller Community Manager | Square, Inc.
Find step-by-step help in our Support Center
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I realize it takes alot of work to sell online and believe me, im putting in the work. But, im having no luck with making sales. I also realize it takes money to make money. But, i don't have the money without sales. So, is there something else i can do to generate customers? Im putting out the ads, which i can't really afford but, doing it anyway. Im on social media, facebook, instagram etc.. 

Nancy McManis
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