The new Shop feature appears to be transforming the entire app experience.
TikTokâs shopping push left my For You page in shambles Right next to the For You page on TikTok lives the TikTok Shop, the new and inevitable evolution of the companyâs attempts [to make money off of]( how good TikTok can be at making products go viral. When I opened the Shop page after its official roll-out to all US users on Tuesday, I got two listings for different brands of trendy purple toothpaste (the appeal is twofold: The brands claim the toothpaste can temporarily correct staining, and brushing teeth with dark purple goo makes for visually interesting content). There are multiple offers of what appear to be knock-off pickle jar sweatshirts, a design that was [originally printed and sold by an Indiana clothing boutique]( and then popularized when a bunch of fitness and beauty influencers started wearing it in their videos. This is, on the surface, not that unusual for e-commerce in 2023. TikTok Shop feels like a mix of Amazon and Wish or Temu; products from big, verified brands are sold alongside [cheap apparel and household goods](, some of which [appear to be scammy or counterfeit]( (though third-party sellers are, [in theory](, required to [meet certain criteria](). But when I left the shop to return to why Iâd opened TikTok in the first place â to scroll aimlessly through my For You Page â I noticed a change. Six of the first 10 videos I got on my For You Page were ads, mostly of products Iâd just clicked on in the Shop. I returned to TikTok through the day, each time to a feed that was peppered with Shop videos, largely from creators Iâd never seen before, trying to sell me teeth whitening gadgets. Until this week, my For You Page was comfortably settled into the queer and mental health niches, with detours into Baldurâs Gate 3 highlights and Taskmaster New Zealand clips. Iâd now describe my For You Page as a scrolling infomercial that knows it needs to show me a couple [Shadowheart memes]( to keep me looking. According to [the New York Times](, TikTokâs full roll-out of the Shop to all US users involves deliberately putting a lot of videos that include a Shop button into user feeds, all while offering discounts across the marketplace to entice people to actually buy something. Some orders are fulfilled by TikTok, others by the seller themselves. TikTok takes a commission from third-party sellers. Likewise, creators on the app who qualify [can earn a commission]( by making content about items available in the store and linking to listings in the marketplace. TikTokâs launch of its shopping platform, which began testing in the US late last year, prompts a lot of questions: Will the app be able to [meaningfully compete]( against Amazon in the US? How will TikTokâs entrance into e-commerce feed into efforts by some lawmakers to ban the app over concerns about its Chinese parent company, Bytedance? But the one I kept asking myself was more experiential: What is TikTok now? Successful social media sites donât stay the same over the course of their lives, and neither do the careers of the creators and influencers who gain popularity on them. So it shouldnât be surprising that TikTokâs push to monetize itself has changed the qualitative experience of being on the app. Thirteen years ago, the idea of being a famous YouTuber was still a pretty strange idea to a lot of people who werenât super online. Now, a YouTube presence is just one part of making a living as a digital creator, a job that involves learning how to cultivate fans and followers to whom you can share (and sell) pieces of your creativity, personality, and time. Creators, and their audiences, have an awareness that they are doing business, that merch sales and sponsorships [are not separate from the work]( of delivering videos that keep fans happy and get views. TikTok has not historically been as good as YouTube at helping creators monetize their content. Because TikTok personalities canât exactly run ads on their own short videos, the app has instead adopted a model of paying eligible creators from a fund, with earnings tied to each videoâs views and engagement. But those earnings [are tiny]( compared to what people can make on YouTube, and creators who have wanted to monetize their followings on TikTok have long had to use other platforms or create sponsored videos. The way in which Shop has burst onto For You pages feels qualitatively different from a mere play at helping influencers, and TikTok, make money off of selling products. My feed feels like someone shuffled together a deck of playing cards with a stack of Monopoly money, where a larger share of the content Iâm getting is based on the products Iâve seen, rather than the creators, topics, or sounds that Iâve come to expect when I open the app. TikTokâs personal feel was always kind of an illusion, driven by recommendations algorithms and the tendency of the appâs users to treat the For You Page a bit like a horoscope. The Shop videos, rather than slipping into the illusion that my For You Page was really for me, instead felt like interruptions. Whether that will change how users feel about the app remains to be seen. But TikTok, certainly, is changing. âAbby Ohlheiser, senior reproter [This is cool] Weâre launching Vox Recommends, a new newsletter, on September 15. Our editors will send you curated picks of the best Vox journalism to read, watch, and listen to every week. [Sign up here with one click](. 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