š
Google researchers explore search trends around personal finances - YouTube
Channel: unknown
[1]
Ashley Wells: Why has interest in āsecond
hand storesā exploded, and why are searches
[6]
for āno fee cardsā going through the roof?
[8]
Whatās a ābuy now pay later app,ā and
when did they get so popular?
[11]
Stick around to get your answers.
[13]
Wells: Once a month, a group of data analysts
and marketers get together to explore the
[17]
most recent trends in Google Search.
[20]
The Insights Jam Team includes Nina Taniguchi,
consumer insights manager; Casey Fictum, product
[29]
marketing manager; Dan Trovato, data insights
manager; and me, Ashley Wells, consumer insights
[41]
manager.
[43]
Welcome to the Insights Jam.
[50]
Thanks for joining us.
[51]
Iām Ashley, and Iām happy to be here with
my colleagues Nina, Casey, and Dan.
[54]
Hey, everyone, howās it going?
[55]
Everyone: [crosstalk] Hey.
[56]
Hi.
[57]
Nina Taniguchi: And Kiki!
[58]
Wells: And Kiki!
[59]
Hi, Kiki.
[60]
Sheās our honorary Google expert for the
day.
[62]
So letās jam.
[63]
Letās jump in.
[64]
Wells: So weāve seen Google searches for
āsecond hand storesā grow over 300% year
[69]
over year.
[70]
Any thoughts initially on how consumers are
adjusting and thinking about secondhand stores
[76]
as they seek to stretch their dollar and be
more intentional with how theyāre buying
[81]
and spending?
[82]
Trovato: So Iāve actually searched for this
one recently, and I kind of feel like when
[86]
youāve searched through Google Search data
for as long as we have, your life starts to
[90]
mirror the searches.
[91]
As I dig into some of the top examples that
are driving this growth, some of the examples
[96]
include both āsecond hand stores near meā
and āonline second hand stores.ā
[101]
So I think itās important to note with this
one, thereās both an online and an offline
[106]
demand for this.
[107]
Fictum: Another thing that I wonder is, maybe
consumers are looking for ways to make money
[111]
too, because itās very clear that there
are many brands out there that will give you
[115]
money for your clothes, and they have ways
to do that online.
[118]
So I wonder if some of this trend speaks to
that a bit.
[121]
Taniguchi: I think beyond that, though, also
is just maybe this movement or increased movement
[126]
weāre seeing towards a more thoughtful consumption.
[129]
Greater concern for the environment and looking
for more sustainable solutions.
[136]
I think around 63% of people were saying that
they are being more thoughtful about what
[142]
they spend their money on.
[143]
Wells: Yeah, definitely.
[144]
And I think thereās a little bit of opportunity
too for brands to kind of get ahead of this
[148]
sustainability trend.
[150]
Trovato: I think youāre right, Ashley.
[151]
I think it just makes good business sense.
[152]
Right?
[153]
Youāre meeting the customer where they are.
[154]
Wells: So I think that segues us pretty nicely
into our next data point, which is that Google
[160]
searches for āno feesā have grown globally
by 90% year over year.
[165]
And this one I think is not surprising, given
living in this post-pandemic world.
[169]
People are just finding ways to save on what
they can, make the most out of the dollar,
[177]
and still being able to benefit from the convenience
of certain services that are offered.
[181]
Fictum: So Ashley, this is one ā the example
ā you said āno feesā as the search trend.
[186]
And if you think about what Google does as
a company, and does well is, weāre able
[190]
to understand the intent behind a phrase like
that.
[193]
āNo feesā on its own, itās quite general.
[196]
And so, there are a lot of things that ā we
see these terms like these a lot, where it
[202]
could be a variety of things that make that
term pop.
[205]
And so, an example would be, it could be that
there was a song that was released called
[211]
āNo Feesā that is now all the sudden popular.
[213]
Pop cultural is like the music; the song would
be an example of that.
[217]
It could be a fleeting thing.
[219]
It may not sustain.
[220]
Trovato: Iād love to read the lyrics of
the āNo Feeā song, Casey.
[223]
I think thatād be real fun.
[224]
Fictum: It probably exists, you just ⦠[crosstalk/laughing]
[225]
Trovato: [crosstalk/laughing] ⦠a really
fun song.
[227]
Taniguchi: So to build on Caseyās point,
when we dug into those āno feeā Google
[233]
searches further, things like ādebit cards
with no fees,ā āprepaid cards with no
[239]
fees,ā ābanks with no fees.ā
[241]
So, I think with that, it starts to become
clear that it is a financially driven search.
[248]
Taniguichi: So since the start of the pandemic,
weāve seen, also, a lot of interest in free
[254]
stock-trading platforms disrupting the market,
like Robinhood and M1 Finance.
[260]
And so some of the more legacy platforms that
have been around for a while, like Charles
[268]
Schwab, have had to follow suit because some
of these more up-and-coming companies are
[276]
stepping in to meet the more demanding consumer
base that theyāre facing.
[281]
Trovato: And I think driven by a lot of these
market disruptors, consumers are now, in addition
[288]
to things like āno fees,ā theyāre also
just expecting more transparency around how
[295]
companies make their money.
[296]
Apart from the āno feeā searches, weāve
also seen these types of increased demand
[301]
for transparency across the finance space.
[304]
Particularly, weāve seen examples in the
investment management space and the insurance
[309]
space and others.
[311]
Wells: Thereāre so many brands out there
for consumers to choose from.
[314]
And so, when we think about it, specifically
in the finance space, I think āno feesā
[319]
just really rings a bell and really resonates
with consumers.
[321]
Wells: But I think it also dovetails us nicely
into our last data point, which is that ā¦
[326]
Wells: ⦠weāve seen Google searches for
ābuy now pay later appsā up over 200%
[332]
globally year over year.
[333]
So itāll be curious to see how this kind
of stacks up against some of the more traditional
[339]
payment options.
[340]
Trovato: So for me, this oneās all about
the growth of immediate versus delayed gratification.
[345]
Search is up 200% year on year.
[348]
Itās easy to dismiss that as growing, but
that is big and growing, and itās already
[354]
growing off a very huge number.
[355]
Trovato: I think itās interesting that demand
for this type of payment has grown so much
[360]
year on year.
[361]
You know, I used to work with a U.K. fast-fashion
e-commerce player, and they partnered with
[369]
a company called Klarna to incorporate buy
now, pay later options into their site, and
[374]
immediately saw their average basket size
increase significantly.
[378]
Taniguchi: Thatās really interesting, Dan.
[380]
I think that could be a little bit of a double-edged
sword for retailers as well.
[386]
I remember hearing about retailers in Germany,
for example, seeing both basket sizes increase,
[393]
but also returns increase and that, therefore,
increases their cost of business as well.
[399]
Trovato: Itās interesting, you mentioned
the German market, and I thought itād be
[403]
interesting to note that a lot of the top
examples that weāre seeing from this come
[408]
from outside the U.S.
[409]
So we see U.K., Australia, and India, all
where this is on the rise.
[414]
Fictum: And when we see trends like this that,
again, not only have momentum, but this is,
[419]
for me, lights start to go off a little bit,
especially as someone who straddles the design
[424]
and the marketing world.
[426]
It becomes a responsibility sometimes to consider
some of the negative sides of this.
[431]
There are different ways to think about this
trend rather than just, say, put a button
[435]
out there to drive to conversion of buy now,
pay later.
[438]
Wells: So I wonder, to your point, Casey,
if there is some unique positioning there
[442]
that these disruptor brands can leverage to
be able to kind of take a sense of corporate
[449]
responsibility to make sure that people are
using their services as responsibly as they
[454]
can.
[455]
But also maybe thereās a sense of obligation
there for them to commit to some type of messaging
[460]
that talks to consumers about debt accumulation
and how that they can kind of rally against
[466]
that among all these other perks that consumers
seemingly feel are kind of risk-free, keeping
[472]
that in the back of their minds as well.
[473]
Fictum: Yeah, and something I didnāt think
about until you just mentioned [it], the concept
[479]
of giving that as an option isnāt necessarily
new.
[484]
Itās been around, right?
[485]
But, what it definitely isnāt is an expectation
yet of the user.
[489]
So I think of something like free shipping
ā thatās a great example of something
[493]
that now is just sort of expected.
[495]
Fictum: So I think we should keep an eye on
it, because if it becomes an expectation of
[499]
users, you could also flip it and say like,
well, this gives a lot of people the opportunity
[502]
to buy and pay over time, which then makes
it a little more accessible to more people,
[508]
but should probably be thought of very differently
from a design perspective.
[511]
Wells: Yeah, definitely.
[512]
Well, I know weāre knee deep in conversation,
but weāre at time.
[517]
Thank you so much.
[518]
I just wanted to extend my thanks for you
guys being here and taking the time to join
[523]
us on the Insights Jam.
[525]
So we will see you soon.
[526]
Thanks for tuning in.
[527]
Everyone: [crosstalk] Thanks, Ashley!
[528]
So long!
[529]
See you!
[530]
Wells: Thanks for joining our Insights Jam.
[531]
Donāt forget to subscribe to get all your
great Think with Google YouTube content.
[536]
Until next time, you keep searching, and weāll
keep exploring what it all means.
[540]
See you.
You can go back to the homepage right here: Homepage





