Google researchers explore search trends around personal finances - YouTube

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Ashley Wells: Why has interest in ā€œsecond hand storesā€ exploded, and why are searches
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for ā€œno fee cardsā€ going through the roof?
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What’s a ā€œbuy now pay later app,ā€ and when did they get so popular?
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Stick around to get your answers.
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Wells: Once a month, a group of data analysts and marketers get together to explore the
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most recent trends in Google Search.
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The Insights Jam Team includes Nina Taniguchi, consumer insights manager; Casey Fictum, product
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marketing manager; Dan Trovato, data insights manager; and me, Ashley Wells, consumer insights
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manager.
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Welcome to the Insights Jam.
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Thanks for joining us.
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I’m Ashley, and I’m happy to be here with my colleagues Nina, Casey, and Dan.
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Hey, everyone, how’s it going?
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Everyone: [crosstalk] Hey.
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Hi.
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Nina Taniguchi: And Kiki!
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Wells: And Kiki!
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Hi, Kiki.
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She’s our honorary Google expert for the day.
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So let’s jam.
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Let’s jump in.
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Wells: So we’ve seen Google searches for ā€œsecond hand storesā€ grow over 300% year
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over year.
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Any thoughts initially on how consumers are adjusting and thinking about secondhand stores
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as they seek to stretch their dollar and be more intentional with how they’re buying
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and spending?
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Trovato: So I’ve actually searched for this one recently, and I kind of feel like when
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you’ve searched through Google Search data for as long as we have, your life starts to
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mirror the searches.
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As I dig into some of the top examples that are driving this growth, some of the examples
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include both ā€œsecond hand stores near meā€ and ā€œonline second hand stores.ā€
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So I think it’s important to note with this one, there’s both an online and an offline
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demand for this.
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Fictum: Another thing that I wonder is, maybe consumers are looking for ways to make money
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too, because it’s very clear that there are many brands out there that will give you
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money for your clothes, and they have ways to do that online.
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So I wonder if some of this trend speaks to that a bit.
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Taniguchi: I think beyond that, though, also is just maybe this movement or increased movement
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we’re seeing towards a more thoughtful consumption.
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Greater concern for the environment and looking for more sustainable solutions.
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I think around 63% of people were saying that they are being more thoughtful about what
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they spend their money on.
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Wells: Yeah, definitely.
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And I think there’s a little bit of opportunity too for brands to kind of get ahead of this
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sustainability trend.
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Trovato: I think you’re right, Ashley.
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I think it just makes good business sense.
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Right?
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You’re meeting the customer where they are.
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Wells: So I think that segues us pretty nicely into our next data point, which is that Google
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searches for ā€œno feesā€ have grown globally by 90% year over year.
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And this one I think is not surprising, given living in this post-pandemic world.
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People are just finding ways to save on what they can, make the most out of the dollar,
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and still being able to benefit from the convenience of certain services that are offered.
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Fictum: So Ashley, this is one — the example — you said ā€œno feesā€ as the search trend.
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And if you think about what Google does as a company, and does well is, we’re able
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to understand the intent behind a phrase like that.
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ā€œNo feesā€ on its own, it’s quite general.
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And so, there are a lot of things that — we see these terms like these a lot, where it
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could be a variety of things that make that term pop.
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And so, an example would be, it could be that there was a song that was released called
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ā€œNo Feesā€ that is now all the sudden popular.
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Pop cultural is like the music; the song would be an example of that.
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It could be a fleeting thing.
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It may not sustain.
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Trovato: I’d love to read the lyrics of the ā€œNo Feeā€ song, Casey.
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I think that’d be real fun.
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Fictum: It probably exists, you just … [crosstalk/laughing]
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Trovato: [crosstalk/laughing] … a really fun song.
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Taniguchi: So to build on Casey’s point, when we dug into those ā€œno feeā€ Google
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searches further, things like ā€œdebit cards with no fees,ā€ ā€œprepaid cards with no
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fees,ā€ ā€œbanks with no fees.ā€
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So, I think with that, it starts to become clear that it is a financially driven search.
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Taniguichi: So since the start of the pandemic, we’ve seen, also, a lot of interest in free
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stock-trading platforms disrupting the market, like Robinhood and M1 Finance.
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And so some of the more legacy platforms that have been around for a while, like Charles
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Schwab, have had to follow suit because some of these more up-and-coming companies are
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stepping in to meet the more demanding consumer base that they’re facing.
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Trovato: And I think driven by a lot of these market disruptors, consumers are now, in addition
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to things like ā€œno fees,ā€ they’re also just expecting more transparency around how
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companies make their money.
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Apart from the ā€œno feeā€ searches, we’ve also seen these types of increased demand
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for transparency across the finance space.
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Particularly, we’ve seen examples in the investment management space and the insurance
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space and others.
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Wells: There’re so many brands out there for consumers to choose from.
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And so, when we think about it, specifically in the finance space, I think ā€œno feesā€
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just really rings a bell and really resonates with consumers.
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Wells: But I think it also dovetails us nicely into our last data point, which is that …
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Wells: … we’ve seen Google searches for ā€œbuy now pay later appsā€ up over 200%
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globally year over year.
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So it’ll be curious to see how this kind of stacks up against some of the more traditional
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payment options.
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Trovato: So for me, this one’s all about the growth of immediate versus delayed gratification.
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Search is up 200% year on year.
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It’s easy to dismiss that as growing, but that is big and growing, and it’s already
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growing off a very huge number.
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Trovato: I think it’s interesting that demand for this type of payment has grown so much
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year on year.
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You know, I used to work with a U.K. fast-fashion e-commerce player, and they partnered with
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a company called Klarna to incorporate buy now, pay later options into their site, and
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immediately saw their average basket size increase significantly.
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Taniguchi: That’s really interesting, Dan.
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I think that could be a little bit of a double-edged sword for retailers as well.
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I remember hearing about retailers in Germany, for example, seeing both basket sizes increase,
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but also returns increase and that, therefore, increases their cost of business as well.
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Trovato: It’s interesting, you mentioned the German market, and I thought it’d be
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interesting to note that a lot of the top examples that we’re seeing from this come
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from outside the U.S.
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So we see U.K., Australia, and India, all where this is on the rise.
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Fictum: And when we see trends like this that, again, not only have momentum, but this is,
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for me, lights start to go off a little bit, especially as someone who straddles the design
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and the marketing world.
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It becomes a responsibility sometimes to consider some of the negative sides of this.
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There are different ways to think about this trend rather than just, say, put a button
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out there to drive to conversion of buy now, pay later.
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Wells: So I wonder, to your point, Casey, if there is some unique positioning there
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that these disruptor brands can leverage to be able to kind of take a sense of corporate
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responsibility to make sure that people are using their services as responsibly as they
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can.
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But also maybe there’s a sense of obligation there for them to commit to some type of messaging
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that talks to consumers about debt accumulation and how that they can kind of rally against
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that among all these other perks that consumers seemingly feel are kind of risk-free, keeping
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that in the back of their minds as well.
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Fictum: Yeah, and something I didn’t think about until you just mentioned [it], the concept
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of giving that as an option isn’t necessarily new.
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It’s been around, right?
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But, what it definitely isn’t is an expectation yet of the user.
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So I think of something like free shipping — that’s a great example of something
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that now is just sort of expected.
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Fictum: So I think we should keep an eye on it, because if it becomes an expectation of
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users, you could also flip it and say like, well, this gives a lot of people the opportunity
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to buy and pay over time, which then makes it a little more accessible to more people,
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but should probably be thought of very differently from a design perspective.
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Wells: Yeah, definitely.
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Well, I know we’re knee deep in conversation, but we’re at time.
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Thank you so much.
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I just wanted to extend my thanks for you guys being here and taking the time to join
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us on the Insights Jam.
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So we will see you soon.
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Thanks for tuning in.
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Everyone: [crosstalk] Thanks, Ashley!
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So long!
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See you!
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Wells: Thanks for joining our Insights Jam.
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Don’t forget to subscribe to get all your great Think with Google YouTube content.
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Until next time, you keep searching, and we’ll keep exploring what it all means.
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See you.