TikTok Shop disrupts Malaysia’s search-led retail
Creators and livestreams now shape how Malaysian consumers buy online.
TikTok Shop says Malaysian consumers are increasingly relying on creator recommendations and live content to make purchases, accelerating a shift away from traditional search-led e-commerce and changing how brands compete for visibility online.
The platform said Malaysian users now conduct more than 100 million product searches daily as recommendation-led shopping gains traction across local retail categories.
Nur Azre Abdul Aziz, Senior Director of Strategic Partnerships at TikTok Shop Malaysia, said shopping behaviour is increasingly shaped by creators, livestreams, and personalised content.
“One of the key things that we've noticed is that there's a global phenomenon of the yellow bag, where people use TikTok Shop to discover new things,” Aziz said.
The “yellow bag” refers to TikTok Shop’s integrated shopping feature attached to creator videos and livestreams, allowing users to purchase products directly while viewing content.
According to TikTok Shop Malaysia, recommendation-driven shopping is outperforming traditional browsing behaviour.
“What the data shows is that 1.5 times more people buy things from TikTok Shop based on online recommendations,” Aziz said. “This is true for people that they trust and where they have built emotional connections.”
The discussion highlighted how smaller Malaysian brands are benefiting from the platform’s recommendation system, which gives newer businesses greater visibility against larger retailers.
“1.2 times more people also repurchase from the same brand,” Aziz said. “So this allows a lot of smaller, homegrown brands to build authentic moments and customer loyalty as well.”
TikTok Shop also reported rising demand for premium and verified products, with TikTok Shop Mall recording 130% year-on-year sales growth.
At the same time, brands face increasing pressure to produce livestreams, creator partnerships, and short-form content to remain competitive inside recommendation feeds.
TikTok Shop said its ACE 2.0 strategy focuses on “assortment, content, and empowerment,” combining affiliate collaborations, live commerce, and customer engagement tools.
According to a Kearney report endorsed by Malaysia’s Ministry of Economy and MDEC, TikTok Shop contributed RM20b in gross value added and supported 147,000 jobs nationwide.
TikTok Shop said initiatives such as Jom Lokal and TikTok Shop Academy are helping local businesses expand into broader customer markets as recommendation-led commerce becomes more embedded across Malaysia’s retail sector.
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