1. Retain Customer Data
This is apparently one of the primary reasons behind why brands are going D2C. While selling products on third-party sites, brands have to rely on the platforms for customer data to conduct business analysis, study customer behaviour, etc.
Meanwhile, when a brand sells products through its on-site, it can track and gather all the information first-hand.
- Who bought the products?
- When did they buy the product?
- Which channel did they engage with before making the purchase?
- What device were they using?
- Are they repeat or new users?
With one’s own D2C platform, brands can also track returns, address customer complaints (or praises), enhance marketing strategies, improve targeting and messaging, and do much more.
Consider this data as a gold mine for direct to consumer brands, which, otherwise, is not accessible to them when selling products via third-party sites.
2. Build And Nurture Direct Relationships With Customers
As a general fact, when you’re selling products via a third party, you can’t expect them to treat your customers the same way as you.
Will they put in those extra efforts? Probably not. The result? Average customer experience with no guarantee of repeat purchase.
This is exactly what direct to consumer stands opposite of. Going D2C – direct-to-consumers – gives brands the opportunity to build and nurture healthy relationships with their prospects and customers.
For instance, if a customer’s order doesn’t arrive on time or has been delivered damaged, a third-party site may or may not take ownership or make complete efforts to solve customer issues. Meanwhile, a D2C brand becomes the eyes and ears of its customers to ensure that every problem or issue raised is addressed at the earliest.

3. Offer Better Prices
Since D2C means going directly to the customers, brands cut out intermediaries and retain their profit margins. They don’t have to pay any commission to a third-party site for selling their products, spend money on promotion activities or run ads to survive the cut-throat competition on these platforms. They can simply utilise these saved funds to enhance customer experience and explore more marketing and selling channels.
Additionally, since they’re selling products directly from their platform, they can offer better prices to customers, which are otherwise expensive due to the involvement of middlemen.
4. Strategically Offer Deals and Discounts
Another reason why brands are going D2C is that they retain the ability to call shots on deals, discounts, and sales. They can also do innovations and use discounting features that increase the chances of conversions.
For instance, Gokwik’s dynamic incentivisation feature allows direct to consumer brands to offer multiple percentages of discounts to customers depending on their profile and propensity to prepay. Brands can also choose from
GoKwik’s 200+ discount configurations to offer the best discount options that help maximise revenue and reduce cash burn.
5. Fuel Product Development
As mentioned above, customer data is like a gold-mine. Brands can use this gold mine to study customer behaviour, analyse trends, and even use it to fuel product development.
For instance, by studying customer behaviour patterns on their website, eCommerce brands can take a call to enhance their product offerings, maybe enhance upselling opportunities, or even embed smart ways to optimise the customer journey.
6. Harness The Power Of Omnichannel Commerce
Omnichannel commerce is a means to utilise multiple channels to increase sales and provide a unified customer experience irrespective of where the customer shops.
As per a study conducted by
Harvard Business Review, nearly 73% of consumers use multiple channels to shop during their entire purchase journey.
Omnichannel commerce is fast becoming a norm that customers expect. And, brands can fullfil this expectation by going D2C. In absolute honesty, not having a unified experience can cost a brand potential sales and customer loss as well.
7. Control Over Messaging, Branding, And Reputation
This is another reason why brands are moving towards the direct to consumer world.
If anything, control is one that every brand wants to retain. Control over pricing, messages, branding, and especially control over reputation. Having total control over various touch points can help brands provide customers with a high-quality experience no matter the channel they engage with to make a purchase.
Meanwhile, brands can also control the messages that are sent to customers. They can leverage personalisation to increase a sense of humanly feeling and compel customers to take the desired action.
For instance,
Tellephant enables brands to use WhatsApp for communication. Be it sending order detail updates to recovering abandoned carts or even informing about upcoming sales or new product launches, eCommerce brands can custom-create messages and push them across to customers to increase personalisation.
Brands are going D2C and in this respect, they must have complete control over their data as this will give them the ability to build their public image the way they want. They can use influencer marketing to build a strong reputation in the market and leverage google ads to increase awareness.
8. Control Over Otherwise External Factors, Especially RTOs
The legacy issue of
return-to-origin (RTO) is one of the major reasons behind brand profit loss. RTO refers to a situation in which a customer refuses delivery at the doorstep or cancels the order before it’s delivered. This especially happens if it’s a cash-on-delivery (COD) order. This results in a brand incurring additional costs including reverse logistics, repackaging, inventory blockage, etc.
Though brands have less control over RTOs when selling products via third-party sites. They can easily solve this problem via their direct to consumer sites.
- Identify high-risk users (with low buying intent) and block them at the very beginning from placing COD orders
- Incentivise high-risk or mid-risk users on making prepaid payments and hence, reduce the chances of RTOs.
- Send COD confirmation messages before order placement to reduce impulsive buying