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Localizing for the Brazilian Ecommerce Market

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In our previous installment on the viability of the global ecommerce market, we advised ecommerce companies to focus primarily on growing sales in their home market. We noted that, at some point, the growth rate for one’s home market slows. When this happens, it is time to start thinking about a strategy for international expansion.

We advised businesses located in G7 countries to begin their international sales strategy with other G7 member states, because these are mature ecommerce markets whose populations have higher Internet penetration rates, higher GDP per capita, and stronger ecommerce sales than other emerging markets. In other words, consumers in G7 countries have money to spend, and they like to spend it online.

Which brings us to the BRIC (Brazil, Russia, India and China) countries. The BRICs are countries with massive populations, growing middle classes, and expanding ecommerce markets. They currently don’t generate the same volume of sales in those G7 countries (except for China, but that is another story), but they will soon. Forward thinking ecommerce companies would do well to lay the groundwork now for future expansion in these growth markets.

The key to unlocking ecommerce sales in these countries is localization. Localization in ecommerce simply means taking your existing offering and adapting it to meet the expectations of customers in a given location. This means updating the language, price, currency, payment method, etc., to that of your target market.

The rest of this post focuses on the unique localization challenges for entering the Brazilian ecommerce market.

Why You Should Care About Brazilian Ecommerce

Brazil is ripening for palatable ecommerce opportunities.

  • It is home to over 200 million people, making it the fifth most populous country on planet Earth.
  • It is currently seventh largest GDP in the world in terms of individual countries.
  • Online retail sales in Brazil are expected to double in the next two years.

Localizing For Language

While most Brazilians have a passing familiarity with English from their school days, 99 percent of the population speaks Brazilian Portugese (a distinct dialect from European Portugese). To penetrate the Brazilian ecommerce market from afar, you need to make sure the text on your site is translated professionally by someone with an inside understanding of your specific industry.

Since it is costly and time consuming to translate an entire website from one language to another, you must first prioritize which pages on your site are critical for translation. At the very least, make sure that your checkout process and customer service offerings are localized for your Brazilian customers. This facilitates better conversions and ensures that your Brazilian customers can receive the right kind of support should they need it.

Brazilian Payment Methods

While credit cards are used for the vast majority of online payments in Brazil, a significant portion, around 30 percent, of those cards are issued domestically, and are only authorized to be used in Brazil. That means without a local entity and local merchant account, merchants from outside Brazil are unable to accept orders from many would-be customers. If you don’t have the resources to start a local Brazilian office to partner with local banks, you need to find an ecommerce partner with the capability to process local orders.

Additionally, another significant portion of online sales depend on a method called Boleto Bancario. As we noted in our Payment Trends Across the Globe post, the payment process for Boleto is essentially a cash payment. Customers place their order online and receive a pre-filled bank slip. They can either pay online, with cash at a bank or other authorized processors such as drugstores, supermarkets or post offices.By utilizing this payment method in your checkout process you stand a better chance of raising Brazilian conversion rates.

Thirdly, growing sales in Brazil depends on offering customers installment payments. Pervasive in Brazil, installments are regularly offered to customers both offline and online, and are di rigueur in Brazilian commerce. Consider the following example:

In the Avast U.S. store, their premier product is regularly priced at $70, but is offered here for $50—a $20 savings for a year long license for one PC.

Avast store U.S.
Avast store, U.S.



Now consider their Brazilian store for the same product which we found using an IP proxy service to imitate a Brazilian customer’s experience. It is regularly priced at R$119, but offered here for R$99 to be paid over three installments.

Avast Brazil Store2
Avast store, Brazil

 

Not only does Avast meet their customers’ expectations by offering installments, they wisely reduce the price for the more cost conscious Brazilian customer by over 30 percent. Now, that’s smart marketing. One thing they could do to improve their conversion rates would be to test different localized prices in clean, friendly numbers. $49.67 just doesn’t have the same appeal as $49.99.

Keystone

To effectively penetrate the Brazil market, you will need to understand the intricacies of localization, especially in terms of language, payments and prices.

The post Localizing for the Brazilian Ecommerce Market appeared first on cleverbridge.


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