Chart
| Aug 25, 2023
Source: Mobile Marketing Data Labo (MMD)
Japanese brand Muji combines online browsing data, in-store purchasing history, and real-time inventory updates to deliver personalized coupons and timely push notifications via its mobile app.
Report
| Mar 4, 2024
D) Japan. China holds the greatest number of top 100 banks, with 19 institutions collectively holding assets worth $30.458 trillion, per S&P.
Article
| Apr 15, 2024
By 2024, India will overtake Japan to become the third-largest retail market. Brick-and-mortar still rules India’s retail sector. Only 7.9% of total retail sales in 2023 will come from digital. But ecommerce is growing much faster than physical store sales and will account for 10.0% of the total by 2027. In addition, mcommerce will account for 86.0% of online sales in 2027.
Report
| Aug 2, 2023
In Japan, Twitter’s still No. 1. It’s been that way for over a decade. This year, there will be 43.6 million Twitter users in Japan, representing 35.2% of the population. In 2025, Instagram will assume the top position.
Report
| Jun 27, 2023
Netflix and other streamers are doubling down on Japanese animation: Half of Netflix’s 222 million subscribers watched anime last year.
Article
| Apr 5, 2022
Article
| Apr 18, 2023
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| Nov 22, 2021
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| Jan 31, 2023
Article
| Sep 16, 2022
The US isn’t the only country with serious talks of TikTok bans. Japan, the UK, Germany, and France are all countries with over 15 million TikTok users each that could be left with a lot of time on their hands if TikTok bans succeed.
Article
| May 19, 2023
The most noteworthy holdouts still favoring traditional ad spending are Japan, Italy, India, and Indonesia. To view the full forecast, click here. China’s embrace of all things digital remains unmatched. Just as China leads the world in ecommerce as a share of overall retail, it also leads in digital advertising as a share of total media advertising.
Report
| Jan 10, 2024
Amazon will capture more than half (51.1%) of all retail ecommerce sales in Germany this year, according to our forecast. Canada will have the second-highest share of Amazon ecommerce sales among the countries we track, at 41.5%, followed by the US, UK, Japan, and Mexico.
Article
| Apr 21, 2023
I mentioned a couple of places in the news there, in Brazil and Japan. There's stuff that's already happened in Canada, Paul. Why don't you introduce us to some of the legislation that's been passed over there and just fill us in on how successful or unsuccessful it's been? Paul Briggs:. Sure. In prepping for the podcast, I did a little bit of homework here.
Audio
| Mar 28, 2024
Our latest forecasts on media and tech usage in Japan offer a glimpse of what’s expected.
Article
| Nov 9, 2022
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| Sep 21, 2022
Source: eMarketer
Chart
| Aug 31, 2022
Source: Plume
The US retail giant has opened up its third-party marketplace and invited sellers from China, Canada, Japan, the UK, and other countries to join. It now offers around 400 million SKUs from marketplace sellers—up from about 75 million pre-pandemic.
Report
| Jun 6, 2023
Worldline partnered with Japan-based Vesca to process digital payments, which can give it an early mover advantage as cashlessness grows.
Article
| Mar 4, 2022
Honda’s Prologue SUV ushers in its EV transition: The second-largest Japanese carmaker is leaning on American technology to jumpstart its wider electrification efforts with a SUV it designed in VR.
Article
| May 20, 2022
Forecasts
| Feb 21, 2024
Source: Insider Intelligence | eMarketer
Forecasts
| Jan 30, 2024
Source: Insider Intelligence | eMarketer
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| Jan 24, 2024
Source: Insider Intelligence | eMarketer
In the UK, Mexico, and Japan, Amazon’s share is much lower. Domestic competition is also stronger in these countries. For example, Mercado Libre’s share of ecommerce in Mexico will be 16.0% this year, greater than Amazon’s 13.7% share. Here again, no such domestic rival exists in Canada. Only Germany’s Amazon ecommerce share (51.1%) is higher than Canada’s.
Report
| Mar 27, 2023
In Asia-Pacific, Japan and New Zealand have reached similar agreements with the European Commission. Tighter data control requirements led to major changes in ad buying behaviors. The ad industry—particularly the digital ad sector—has been affected by GDPR more than almost any other. Ad targeting drove the sharing and resharing of consumer data in ways that rode roughshod over privacy rights.
Report
| May 25, 2023