What We Know About E-Commerce An

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What we know about e-commerce and social

commerce
Source: WARC Best Practice, December 2021
Downloaded from WARC

This article provides marketers with information and guidance about connecting marketing
communications directly with the opportunity to purchase and facilitating seamless online purchases.

The ubiquity of smartphones has accelerated the evolution of e-commerce and social commerce.
More brands are keen to adopt an ‘always on’ approach and try to facilitate seamless online purchases
at every opportunity, directly connecting marketing communications with the opportunity to
purchase.

Definition
E-commerce describes the trading of goods and services online.

Social commerce describes online retail which uses social networks or peer to peer communication to drive
sales.

Shoppable media is interactive content that enables users to begin and – increasingly – complete a purchase
within the publisher ecosystem.

Shoppable video is interactive video which allows viewers to click on items to discover more information, add to
basket and complete a purchase.

E-commerce advertising exists within e-commerce ecosystems, including search, classified and display ads.

Livestream is live video (or sometimes audio), usually streamed on social platforms and apps and often hosted
by a celebrity or social media influencer.

Retail media includes all forms of online and offline advertising within retail ecosystems, from targeted
sponsored ads on websites to in-store media.
Key insights
1. Successful digital commerce requires creating future demand as well driving
conversion

As brands increasingly pursue digital commerce and try to emulate the high growth of successful tech and start-
up companies, they are switching focus to a shorter-term, performance-based approach. This risks companies
‘optimising themselves out of effectiveness’ as they efficiently convert all existing market demand with
performance marketing targeted at people already in the market, then see their performance metrics decline as
that demand is exhausted. To avoid this, most brands need to balance performance marketing with brand-
building to create future demand. While start-ups can grow quickly through strong performance marketing to
convert pre-existing demand, scaling up is much harder as pre-existing demand becomes exhausted. Mature
brands grow most efficiently by focusing on sustaining existing demand and generating new demand.

Future demand is created by standing out with engaging advertising and creating an emotional connection so
new customers are aware of a brand and add it to their consideration set – making them more likely to respond
to performance marketing when they are in the market. Brand-building to create future demand is built on four
drivers:

fame and mental availability (two linked concepts)


recognition via distinctive brand assets
perceptions of value built on brand associations, which help support pricing
brand experience, which needs to match the brand promise.

In seeking to balance demand creation and conversion, brand need to put aside outdated notions that
traditional channels drive brand while digital channels drive performance. As digital channels mature,
and as traditional channels digitise, there will be more opportunities to build brands in what have been thought
of as performance channels, and drive performance from brand-building work. Given these trends, brand-
building (creative and media approaches that build future demand) and performance (conversion of demand)
need to be planned together to leverage the connections between the two and maximise the impact.

Read more in: Rethinking brand for the rise of digital commerce, Does brand matter in digital
commerce? and Do you need online ads to drive online sales?

2. Mobile commerce should be frictionless, personalised and focused on creating


regularity

According to Bloomreach research, direct site traffic accounts for the majority of mobile commerce
traffic, taking a four-fifths share in Europe and North America, so the website experience is fundamental to
success. Deloitte Digital research into brand mobile site data showed that a mere 0.1 second improvement in
load time can influence every step of the user journey, ultimately increasing conversion rates. Conversions grew
by 8% for retail sites and by 10% for travel sites on average. With a 0.1s improvement in site speed, retail
consumers spent almost 10% more.

Starbucks China used app-based communication and digital ecosystem development to maintain customer
acquisition and engagement during the COVID-19 pandemic. It rolled out a succession of online retail
experiences, such as Starbucks Now and Starbucks Delivers, which include mobile order, tracking, payment,
loyalty and e-gifting. In Q1 2020, mobile orders in China accounted for 15% of Starbucks’ total revenue, up 10%
from the previous quarter.

Mobile-first e-commerce platform Joom offers five lessons in launching an effective mobile commerce
experience from scratch:

1. Start with the product and test to get it right. Instant gratification is key, so fewer clicks and frictionless
checkout are vital.
2. Make the product experience as personalised as possible. As the mobile screen can only show limited
options, using machine learning to understand users and personalise their experience is critical. Supporting
multiple languages is also important.
3. Aim to increase lifetime value rather than average order value. Increase the frequency with which
customers browse to discover products by finding out what the triggers are that will keep them coming
back.
4. Harness user-generated content at scale to keep people returning to the platform. Encourage the
creation of authentic and credible product reviews which use rich content like photos, videos and detailed
text descriptions. The volume of reviews is more important than the score – even products with lower
scores are purchased more than those without any.
5. Identify and reward your ‘power users’. Joom created a special section for these ‘power users’ called
the Bloggers Exchange, where they can connect with merchants who want them to review products. For
the platform, the key benefit is the content the ‘power users’ create, as it provides users with a reason to
check the app more regularly.

Read more in: Milliseconds make millions: A study on how improvements in mobile site speed positively
affect a brand’s bottom line, Four factors in China that contributed to faster mobilisation and recovery
against COVID-19 and Launching and scaling a mobile-first e-commerce start-up

3. With growth outside Asia, social commerce is increasingly global

With physical stores closed as a result of COVID-19, social media became a digital store-front for brands to
maintain visibility. Research by Shopify across eleven global markets found that one-quarter (28%) of 18-34
year-olds had made a purchase via social media in 2020, with 20% of those in the 35 to 54 age group
reporting the same. While European data from McKinsey & Co. suggests increases in social commerce were
modest during the pandemic, some two-thirds of people who purchased more intend to continue after the
outbreak ends. In Q2 2021, social media accounted for almost one-tenth (8.9%) of visits to digital
commerce sites, according to worldwide data from the Salesforce Shopping Index, up from 6.6% in Q3 2019.
The figures are even higher for mobile (11.6%) and tablet (16%) traffic. Shares are likely to be higher when
including dark social platforms.

Read more in: One in four young adults has bought via social media, Two in three social commerce
adopters plan to continue and Nearly 10% of online shopping traffic now comes from social media

4. Shoppable media requires a new approach to creative, tech and influencers

Where previously e-commerce was utilitarian and functional, users are growing accustomed to more immersive
and interactive experiences. While hygiene factors such as free delivery remain pivotal to e-commerce success,
shoppers are increasingly influenced by content. GWI found that 29% of online buyers globally would be
encouraged to make a purchase if the shopping experience is “entertaining”, while 24% could be
swayed by a live product demo. Hence the growing importance of shoppable media, which blurs the
boundaries between entertainment and shopping.

Success requires a new approach which blends storytelling with the type of messaging likely to trigger an
immediate conversion. The future of e-commerce lies not in a destination-centric strategy which puts the focus
on online stores, apps and email, but rather a moment-centric one. This means a new approach to e-
commerce technology, to seamlessly operate multiple ‘front-ends’ – an Alexa skill, a Facebook store or a TikTok
video – and provide a native, contextually-relevant experience for users of each digital platform. Until in-app
checkout becomes a common feature of all social platforms, brands should strive to maintain a feeling of
seamlessness for shoppers – even if the back-end integration is not completely smooth.

Influencers will play a pivotal role in helping consumers to discover products and brands to sell them on social
media. This will help marketers to directly attribute sales to influencer marketing. However, effectiveness is
dependent on the influencers selected to take part. Particularly when it comes to livestreaming, the influencer
will ideally combine mainstream appeal with a passionate following. The rise of shoppable media on
social platforms will bring some positive changes for brands. For instance, influencers’ followers will come to
expect shoppability in content. Brands aligned to an influencer’s interest and expertise may also benefit from
shortening the steps to conversion.

Read more in: The WARC Guide to shoppable media and How to thrive in the era of social commerce

5. Community commerce is an emerging opportunity

Community commerce is at the intersection of creator content, community and traditional social commerce. It
involves entertaining, compelling content that just happens to feature brands. It is authentic, creator-driven,
word-of-mouth marketing that can engage audiences as they congregate around particular interests, trending
hashtags or creative stories. Creative content enables product discovery and opportunity for immediate,
seamless conversion, even for unplanned purchases, with the community driving engagement and social
proofing in a way that stimulates decision-making. While they can create their own communities, for most brands
content creators play a vital role as they boost product discovery (78%), educate and inform (76%), and inspire
their audiences to try new products (73%). Brands will need to build a meaningful relationship with creators,
allowing them the freedom to express the unique, authentic voices their followers expect while making a brand
relatable in a way that is true to the platform.

Read more in: From discovery to purchase: The role of community commerce

6. Shoppable formats are driving the convergence of e-commerce and media

The shift to e-commerce is transforming performance marketing. Where previously search engines
commanded most of the budget for bottom of the funnel conversion, today e-commerce platforms offer a better
return. Amazon has seen record growth in the face of the COVID-19 outbreak with significant increases in ad
revenue, according to the latest company reports. This contrasts with the performance of Google Search where
revenue dropped 9.8% year-on-year, according to the latest company reports.

E-commerce platforms like Alibaba in China offer a range of advertising options to capture as much of the
purchase journey as possible, from awareness and engagement right through to purchase. This promises a
seamless customer journey, with no need to leave the site to make the purchase. Unsurprisingly, other platforms
such as Amazon are following suit.

Shoppable ads are now a key trend in digital advertising. Very recently social platforms such
as Facebook, Instagram and YouTube have extended their reach into e-commerce by developing shoppable
formats and storefronts within their platforms. TikTok is also seeking to capitalise on social commerce, tapping
into its Gen Z audiences and potential for entertaining shopping experiences. Having already partnered with e-
commerce platform Shopify and US retail giant Walmart, the app is now developing a ‘self-service’ ad tool and
plans on giving a commission to influencers who share product links.

Omnichannel retailers like Walmart, Kroger and CVS in the US and Sainsbury’s and Ocado in the UK are
getting in on the action too. They are becoming advertising and media destinations by ramping up their e-
commerce capabilities and developing their retail media offerings, which tend to be similar to performance
marketing on other online platforms. Retail media have a variety of native formats which direct shoppers to click
on a product page or store within the retailer site.

Read more in: The WARC Guide to shoppable media, Trends of the month: TikTok, effective budgets and
new Muslim consumers, The Rise of Retail Media – and what this means for brands, and The WARC
Guide to e-commerce and the future of effectiveness

7. In Asia, livestream video is at the forefront of shoppable media growth

Livestreaming is an e-commerce format and marketing and sales method. It integrates live product
demonstrations, live Q&As, time-limited price promotions, live negotiations, and instant ordering through online
streaming services hosted either by an influencer studio, or online store. Interactive features allow viewers to
click on items to discover more information, add to basket and complete a purchase. Formats include interactive
‘hotspots’; ‘buy it now’ overlays; direct in-cart integration; and connections to e-commerce platforms.

Livestreaming as an e-commerce format has been booming in China since the beginning of 2020, accelerated
by store closures and consumers spending more time at home due to the COVID-19 crisis. According to
BCG 30% of consumers say they are shopping more via short-form video platforms like TikTok and
via livestreams like Kuaishou - and that they will continue to do so. The number of livestreaming users
reached 560 million in China as of March 2020, representing 62% of the country’s total number of internet
users. Livestreamed commerce is expected to account for a fifth of all e-commerce sales in China in 2021.

Livestreaming is also starting to take off in other countries. For example, a GWI study found that nearly half
(45%) of internet users in India say they frequently watch livestreams by influencers. Of these, 83% say they are
likely to buy products from influencers they follow. Following its rise in popularity, media owners including
TikTok and Facebook are introducing in-app shoppable livestream events.

While livestreaming is focused on driving short term sales, it can enable improved marketing efficiency by
combining brand marketing and performance marketing. To do so it needs to be viewed as content not
just sales. While Chinese consumers say the main reasons for attending livestreams are “instant coupons,
irresistible gifts and discounts”, inspiring, educational and helpful content is appreciated - research has found
that well-appreciated content has a 72% correlation with a better perception of a retail brand.

Livestreaming effectiveness is impacted by the platform – high liveness, high shoppability is best – and the
creator who hosts it. As with traditional advertising, attitudes towards the host, actual content and accurate
targeting are important. Creators can use the following strategies to boost the shoppability of the live advertising
session beyond choosing an ideal platform:

select a congruent brand or product that fits


undergo host training
present the product in an effective way
facilitate post-advertising purchase
do not just advertise, look at the greater good.

Livestreaming has become increasingly popular in Western markets since the COVID-19 lockdown, mainly
for entertainment, though brands such as Bobbi Brown have had success using it for commercial purposes.

Read more in: The WARC Guide to shoppable media, Strategies for Effective Live Advertising, The
WARC Guide to e-commerce and the future of effectiveness and Trend Snapshot: COVID-19 special –
livestream commerce

8. Brands need the right search strategies to maximise e-commerce potential

Online shopping is becoming an entrenched behaviour in the wake of COVID-19, as consumers see the
benefits of search across the purchase journey from inspiration to purchase – namely convenience, ease of
discovery and comparison. Historically, search use has been focused on bottom-of-the-funnel keywords close to
conversion. However, it also has a role to play earlier in the journey in driving visibility and consideration as
consumers research, explore and evaluate options ahead of purchase. This involves embracing generic
keywords as well as brand terms.

It is suggested approximately 15-20% of search budgets should go to branded terms. A ‘Defend, Expand,
Build’ strategy can:

defend established brands by ensuring customers searching for the brand will be given every opportunity to
convert with minimal distraction from competitive offers
expand brands by upselling and/or cross selling to non-core offerings such as new items, regimens, line
extensions, or even more profitable pack sizes
build brand discovery through high quality and optimised brand and product content.

Another behaviour that has increased during the pandemic is the use of a variety of platforms for visual search,
as consumers seek inspiration. By embracing visual search brands can:

collapse the conversion process, taking the consumer from image to purchase in seconds
be retail-ready on visual platforms like Pinterest and Instagram
enable consumers to search more effectively, particularly when they don’t know the name of the item
they’re looking for.
increase sales through increased conversion and conversion value.

Read more in: The new rules of search, Search strategies for customer retention on e-commerce
platforms and Visual search: The perfect partner for e-commerce

9. Global e-commerce growth accelerated dramatically due to COVID-19 – but has


levelled off
In the US, e-commerce as a share of total U.S retail sales increased 11 percentage points in an eight-
week period thanks to COVID-19, surpassing the total growth seen over the previous ten years. Online grocery
in particular saw a huge jump. In China, e-commerce is expected to grow 34% in 2020, up from the pre-
COVID-19 forecast growth of 26%. Marketplaces such as Amazon and Alibaba have seen exceptional growth,
omnichannel retailers like Walmart and Target are expanding their online offering and platforms like Shopify and
Instacart have risen in prominence. Brands in sectors such as FMCG have seen rapid e-commerce
growth. E-commerce growth shows no sign of going into reverse with half of consumers saying they will
shop online more frequently post-pandemic, particularly GenZ and higher earners. However, it did level off
in early 2021. The growth in e-commerce has prompted brands such as Budweiser to look at DTC offerings
and has accelerated digital transformation for others as well as partnering with traditional omnichannel retailers,
major online marketplaces and pure-play operators to drive brand growth. Existing platforms like Amazon allow
brands to begin selling at speed and scale and offer a strong ROAS for sponsored listings. Brands looking
to build their own e-commerce offering should use data to identify customer pain points, align every component
and use a 'test and learn' approach.

Read more in: The WARC Guide to e-commerce and the future of effectiveness, Coronavirus accelerates
online FMCG spending, Pivoting to e-commerce during COVID-19: Five tips for success and How to
build an e-commerce offering during COVID-19

10. To be effective in e-commerce, brands need to address the marketing basics

Effectiveness in the e-commerce age requires a rethink of the 5 P marketing fundamentals – product, pack
and price, proposition, people and place – to see how they can flex for the online world. For example, brands
such as Mondelez and Hershey are offering bigger packs and multi-buy options, at different price points, as
they look to boost profitability out of online retail.

Delivery is now a new 'moment of truth' for online brands, with packaging a key touchpoint. The moment
when the customer receives a package is an opportunity for a brand to showcase its creativity and enhance the
brand experience. And unboxing is a moment that marketers can capitalise on.

Research into the psychology of online shopping found that mental availability matters more than ever.
Online shopping is perceived as risky, even by risk takers, but strong mental availability helps shoppers feel
confident and in control. As well as mental and physical availability, brands need to plan for digital
availability too. In other words, marketers need to have a strategy for how and where they show up online.

In addition to the basics, like visibility in search, brands should also prioritise influential factors like strong online
reviews. A recent report by Google and The Behavioural Architects shows that social proof can influence
consumer decision-making and therefore help win the ‘digital shelf’. A study in the Journal of Consumer
Behavior found social influence cues – such as showing high average star ratings that customers have awarded
to products – affected purchase decisions. Furthermore, combining them with defaults – pre-selecting
products for consumers to potentially buy – had an even stronger nudging effect. Getting on consumers’ digital
shopping lists where goods are ordered on auto-pilot, or repeat, will be a key objective for online brands.

Read more in: The WARC Guide to e-commerce and the future of effectiveness, Something old,
something new: What can brands do in e-commerce during this recession?, Delight at the doorstep:
letterbox packaging – the new moment of truth and ‘How brands grow’ in the e-commerce era

11. Social commerce is helping brands convert engagement into effectiveness


Winners of the Effective Social Strategy category in the 2020 WARC Awards, particularly those in the QSR
sector, show how brands can engage people throughout the funnel and convert engagement into effectiveness.
For example, Burger King achieved a sales uplift by promoting its new product through a campaign based on
‘creeping’ on social media influencers’ pages. KFC Arabia saw a significant uptake in online food delivery from
its Scroll-Thru campaign, which effectively engaged a millennial audience at all stages of the funnel, with
Facebook content that entertained, engaged and then converted. Success was due to a carefully crafted user
experience, clever use of shoppable ad formats and smart programmatic targeting.

To capitalise on social commerce, brands are advised to do five things:

Create better mobile social commerce experiences, especially on mobile-specific social media platforms
Become more visually driven, relatable and authentic so content stands out from fast-rolling mobile news
feeds - and encourages shoppers to click to find out more and then buy
Build trust and consumer confidence with online experiences which demonstrate the clear value – and
security – of browsing and shopping via social channels
Test and measure the effectiveness of any investment instead of, and as well as, in-store promotion
Constantly optimise the continually evolving customer journey to reflect online behaviour

Read more in: 2020 Social Strategy Report: Insights from the WARC Awards and How brands can
maximise social commerce in 2020

12. Winning instore increasingly requires winning online first

Currently successful brands need to face up to three key challenges created by the shift to e-commerce. Firstly,
it is causing the retail shelf to shrink - the digital shelf on desktop only displays 6-12 SKUs for consideration, the
mobile shelf only 2-3 SKUs and the voice-assisted shelf only 1 SKU. So despite the virtual aisle with millions of
choices, the nature of the digital shelf is one of greater curation, personalisation and recommendation to limit
choice and drive conversion - if a national brand is not winning there, it ultimately ceases to exist to the shopper.
Secondly, e-commerce has enabled the rise of multiple kinds of challenger brand competition to national brands
– DTC and digitally-native brands, specialty channel brands, private label and retailer exclusive brands – as well
as giving agile smaller brands a new route to growth. Thirdly, digital leadership increasingly influences instore
stocking decisions. So winning online with strategic retailer partners will give national brands the greatest
competitive edge to not only capture disproportionate share of growth in the #1 growth channel, but also in the
omnichannel marketplace as retailers make increasingly difficult decisions about what they carry in their physical
stores.

To be successful in e-commerce particularly on Amazon, brands should consider ten principles:

Promote strategically with bundles or unique items rather than price reduction which can erode pricing and
profitability long-term
Invest in subscription programmes that promote loyalty as the positives outweigh the costs
Prioritise online retailer order fulfilment because being out of stock in e-commerce is much more damaging
Prioritise investment in category keyword search rather than branded terms as its is more likely to produce
incremental business
Focus on increasing engagement through improved content on the display page – rather than SEO - to
increase conversion which in turn drive better search outcomes
Treat consumer reviews with the utmost respect
Protect the brand equity by monitoring pricing and enforcing pricing policies
Consumer demand, not price incentives, drives increased retailer demand
Retailers value post-promotional lift rather than in-event ROI in evaluating the success of a promotion – and
so should brands
The incrementality of e-commerce is hard to measure but is the leading indicator of long-term omnichannel
success

Read more in: Three challenges brands need to overcome in e-commerce and Ten ways brands can
crack the Amazon code

13. To make the most of e-commerce holidays non-destination brands need to be “retail
ready”

Black Friday, Cyber Monday and Amazon Prime Day are now hugely important e-commerce occasions for
brands. Non-destination products (think toilet paper, shampoo, coffee, etc) don’t benefit from the retailers’
limelight or shoppers’ wish lists. These brands must work much harder to drive traffic – via aggressive promotion
before the event, targeting loyal shoppers during the event or retargeting after the event. Whatever approach
they take, brands must ensure they are “retail ready” to convert the maximum sales from all traffic by getting
product availability, pricing, page content and search elements right.

Read more in: How non-destination brands can win the e-commerce holidays

14. Digital marketplaces are overtaking search as the key source of online product
information

According to a digital advertising benchmarking report by SaaS, brands are increasing their e-commerce ad
spend by up to 40%, with Amazon the key beneficiary. While search engines used to be in pole position for
online shoppers, Amazon is becoming the go to place for product information. Two-thirds (63%) of online
shoppers start their product searches on Amazon and additional research shows that most turn this into a
purchase. This compares to less than half (48%) of online shoppers saying they start their product search on
search engines. Other marketplaces like eBay, Rakuten and Etsy also score highly on product search and
attract more customers than many retailer and brand sites. Marketplace or Amazon optimisation may become as
important as SEO. Search is in decline particularly amongst the under 24 age group, while Gen Z is more likely
to go straight to a brand website.

Some report that digital marketplaces account for half of all global online retail sales. For brands it is therefore
increasingly important to control and orchestrate their brand story on these platforms. To win, brands must
communicate their distinctive value at the point of sale by bringing brand messages into the commerce
experience. Adapting and embedding brand content to create emotional connection or more engaging mobile
experiences are ways to do this. Marketplace experience dashboards and digital twin technology are tools that
can help brands tailor and manage their experience across multiple marketplaces.

Read more in: Half of online shoppers get product inspiration from Amazon, The end of search
dominance? Consult your marketplace, Where creative meets commerce: Orchestrating brand
experience in digital marketplaces and Accenture Interactive report – Unleash your marketplace
superpower: Manufacturers and the new retail experience
More on this topic
WARC Topic Page: POP & instore

WARC Topic Page: Social Media

WARC Topic Page: Retail & e-commerce

WARC Best Practice: What we know about social commerce in South-East Asia

WARC Best Practice: What we know about direct-to-consumer brands

WARC Best Practice: What we know about digital payments

WARC Best Practice: What we know about marketing on WeChat

WARC Best Practice: What we know about marketing on Pinterest

WARC Data: Global Ad Trends: The pivot to e-commerce

WARC Data: Global Ad Trends: COVID-19 One Year On

WARC Webinar: WARC Talks 360: Rethinking brand for the rise of digital commerce

The WARC Podcast: 3 in 15: Shoppable media

WARC Category Intelligence: What's working in social

WARC Category Intelligence: What's working in Retail

WARC Category Intelligence: What's working in Search

Further reading
Why shoppable content is irresistible and impactful in the new normal

Social commerce: Taking offline’s friendly shopping experience online

From research to discovery: How Google has seen digital shopping mature during the pandemic

How to navigate the ‘messy middle’ with video marketing

What brands need to know about shopping on TikTok and the discovery commerce boom

E-commerce and the case for investing in brand building

The dragon tail effect: Brand building in the age of convergence

Four questions to ask when building an e-commerce marketplace strategy

Gen Z and e-commerce: Expectations in the post-COVID era

Shopify’s four tips for e-commerce success in 2021


What Shopify’s rise says about the future of retail

Amazon’s Kari Callahan on growing its advertising business and the future of e-commerce

Retail in transition: Capitalising on future e-commerce opportunities

Global trends and corporate strategies in marketplaces

The digital customer journey

E-commerce in India: Where do we go from here?

Talking shop: What’s next for Southeast Asia’s marketers as social commerce grows?

E-commerce and the future of effectiveness in KSA and UAE

John Lewis: Social media as a modern day shop floor

L’Oréal is on an ambitious e-commerce journey

A look inside Perfect Diary and China’s 'private traffic' phenomenon

Snap’s Doug Frisbie: Why social commerce and augmented reality are a perfect match

The future of SEO in fashion and beauty

A brand’s guide to innovating and surviving in the e-commerce world

Winning e-commerce: How CPG brands can streamline their business internally

E-commerce best practices gleaned from China's COVID-19 mitigation

CX and e-commerce: How to do better at every stage of the customer journey

Coronavirus disruption: 10 ways brands can succeed in e-commerce

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