CN New online superstore surpasses Amazon and Walmart to become most downloaded app in US


Analysis by Michelle Toh, CNN
February 19, 2023

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A screenshot from Temu's commercial unveiled during the Super Bowl on Sunday, February 12, encouraging consumers to "shop like a billionaire."

Hong Kong (CNN) — A new online shopping platform linked to one of China’s top retailers has quickly become the most downloaded app in the United States, surpassing Amazon and Walmart. Now it’s looking to capitalize from an appearance on America’s biggest stage.

Temu, a Boston-based online retailer that shares the same owner as Chinese social commerce giant Pinduoduo, made its Super Bowl debut on Sunday.

Temu, which runs an online superstore for virtually everything — from home goods to apparel to electronics — unveiled a commercial during the game that encouraged consumers to “shop like a billionaire.”

The pitch? You don’t have to be one.

“Through the largest stage possible, we want to share with our consumers that they can shop with a sense of freedom because of the price we offer,” a Temu spokesperson told CNN in a statement.

The 30-second spot shows the company’s proposition to users: Feel like you’re splurging by buying lots of stuff cheaply. A woman’s swimsuit on Temu costs just $6.50, while a pair of wireless earphones is priced at $8.50. An eyebrow trimmer costs 90 cents.

These surprisingly low prices — by Western standards, at least — have drawn comparisons to Shein, the Chinese fast fashion upstart that also offers a wide selection of inexpensive clothing and home goods, and has made significant inroads into markets including the United States.

Shein is considered one of Temu’s competitors, along with US-based discount retailer Wish and Alibaba’s AliExpress, according to Coresight Research.

Climbing the charts​

Temu, pronounced “tee-moo,” was launched last year by PDD, its US-listed parent company formerly known as Pinduoduo. The company officially changed its name just this month.

PDD’s subsidiary Pinduoduo is one of China’s most popular e-commerce platforms with approximately 900 million users. It made its name with a group-buying business model, allowing people to save money by enlisting friends to buy the same item in bulk.

On its website, Temu says it uses its parent company’s “vast and deep network … built over the years to offer a wide range of affordable quality products.”

Since its rollout in September, the application has been downloaded 24 million times, racking up more than 11 million monthly active users, according to Sensor Tower.

In the fourth quarter of last year, US app installations for Temu exceeded those for Amazon (AMZN), Walmart (WMT) and Target (TGT), according to Abe Yousef, a senior insights analyst at the analytics firm Sensor Tower.

“Temu soared to the top of both US app store charts in November, where the app still holds the top position now,” he told CNN, referring to iOS and Android mobile app stores.

Yousef said the company had been particularly successful at acquiring new users by offering extremely low prices and in-app flash deals, such as 89% off certain items.

The firm is already eyeing new territory. This month, Temu said on Twitter that it plans to expand to Canada.

‘Too cheap’?​

Michael Felice, an associate partner at management consulting firm Kearney, said Temu stood out simply by selling products without high markups.

“Temu might be exposing a white space in the market wherein brands have been producing at extreme low cost, and along the value chain there’s been so much bloated cost passed on for margin,” he told CNN.

“That said, American consumers might not even be ready to accept some of these price points … There’s always the question, ‘is it too cheap to be good?’”

Deborah Weinswig, CEO of Coresight Research, has cautioned that it may be too early to tell whether Temu will be able to maintain those extremely low prices, free shipping and other perks.

“Temu aims to continue to experiment in marketing and offerings, which is possible thanks to its resource-rich parent company,” she wrote in a report.

Its launch, she said, “comes at an opportune moment, as consumers search for value amid still-elevated inflation and a degree of economic uncertainty.”
 
I saw an ad for this shit on YouTube. One of the odd times I accidently use YouTube without going through the brave browser while on my phone. It's basically an app full of Chinese made junk. They have Chinese knock offs of popular brands. In the ad they were showing off some wireless earbuds that looked suspiciously like Apple AirPods. But these were much cheaper. I bet just as good as well. You can cut out the American capitalist middleman and go right to the source for all your cheaply made commie chink junk. But it won't be as overpriced because they took away the corporate branding.

Those capitalists sure did fuck themselves over didn't they? Like always. Point and laugh everyone. Don't feel bad for capitalists rich people and corporations. Remember they don't like you. They really hate you. So much so that they decided paying you enough so you would be able to afford to pay rent and buy groceries was just too much. So, they sent your jobs overseas or brought in cheap foreign labor to take them.
 
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Reactions: Chongqing
Something worth knowing about Amazon: in the last 5 years or so, you might have noticed an uptick of products on Amazon with unpronounceable brand names you've never heard of. Those are cheap Chinese crap. Over the last few years Amazon's been pushing a program to get more Chinese companies to sell on their platform, leading to the influx of cheap chink shit. That's why you have a hard time finding anything reputable these days for a lot of product categories.
Well at least you can buy the cheap chinese shit straight from China now without sending a markup to the bald millionaire asshole that bought the Wahsington Post.
 
  • Agree
Reactions: quaawaa
Stop giving chinks your money. Or at least stop doing it directly.
Well you know the types of people that will buy from them... Right???

It's the same type of assholes that I've been hammering about in todays society that I see in Silicon Valley.

But don't worry, those same assholes who are making the money here in Silicon Valley, are getting laid off.

Yes I am drinking their chilled, carbonated, shitter tears. :dunsparce:
 
Literally never heard of it. Don't care. It's all chinkshit trash and frankly participating in the chinkshit trash consumption economy seems kind of evil to me so I try to not do it if I can.
 
All the cheap plastic and poor quality crap floating around is gonna get worse. Make me queasy. I cant explain it, but it's a visceral reaction just seeing so much....crap everywhere then knowing it's going to be even more plentiful soon. Like small broken plastic toys in the road in my neighborhood. The litter has doubled in a couple years I feel. Smashed headphones, broken vapes, bits and pieces of unidentifiable nonsense. Idk I just feel like the litter is going to get worse if people buy even cheaper shit. I know my brain is exaggerating but it feels like we are headed to living on a collective landfill of broken shit. Just gross.
 
Cut out the middleman, now it's straight from the sweat shop warehouse right to your doorstep.
sort of. the store doesn't seem to have a lot of items.
mostly clothes and accessories.
like no high quality tech or things like that.
I saw an ad for this on Faceberg and they had Glock auto switches in the ad (called something else of course). Some of the diceyist shit I've ever seen.
occassionally youll find 9 milimeter oil filters on amazon.
 
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Oh yeah, as if the online store space hasn't been censorious and dickish enough... now owned by the CCP too.
We need to start restricting these CCP state owned/controlled companies from operating freely in the west.
 
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Reactions: ATI Escapee
The exact same thing that happened to Wish will happen to this as soon as the marketing/influencer spending and free shipping stops. The only reason the same thing hasn't happened to Shein (yet) is because the more niche focus they have on clothes.
 
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