KEY POINTS
  • As consumer brands try to boost sales in the coronavirus-induced economic slump, one of the hottest trends in marketing has yet to prove its worth on the macro level.
  • Within e-commerce, livestreaming-driven sales so far likely only account for between 2% to 10%, analysts estimate.
  • But in a worldwide economic slowdown, if not recession, livestreaming can still offer an opportunity for growth.
A couple wearing protective facemasks as a prevention measure against the COVID-19 coronavirus walk at a nearly empty shopping mall in Beijing on February 27, 2020.

BEIJING — As businesses try to boost sales to during the coronavirus slump, one of the hottest trends in marketing has created plenty of buzz — but it has yet to prove its worth on a macro level.

In the months since Covid-19 prompted millions of people in China to stay at home, plenty of people — from celebrities to government officials and automakers — have jumped on the livestreaming bandwagon that was already taking off. They are now selling directly to consumers via what can be hours of live video.