In 2013 Trade Me was still growing but needed more investment due to the product offer becoming dated, increased competition and the growing importance of mobile. Since then the company has doubled staff numbers to 509, improved its sales team, increased marketing spend to $9.4m from $2.6m in 2012, and last month launched its first ever cohesive brand campaign "Life Lives Here" despite already being seen as the country's most influential domestic brand.
"We've been around for 17 years and we're not a new, shiny thing anymore," Macdonald said. "What we're trying to do with this brand campaign, which is part of a bigger piece of work, is to be more cohesive in how we talk about the brand."
The company released a new universal ioS app last month to improve the experience for both iPhone and iPad users and development on a new mobile-responsive design for the overall site is also underway to provide a "more contemporary and consistent experience for users, regardless of device," Macdonald said. Although most users access the site through a variety of devices, in one month recently 28 percent of all users did so through mobile only.
Trade Me's Classifieds businesses, covering motoring, property, and jobs, was another part of the business that is continuing to show strong growth with revenue up 13.2 per cent to $112.8m, and Macdonald expects Classifieds to follow the same growth path in the next year.
Expenses growth has been hauled back to 17 per cent, compared to 25 per cent the previous year mainly due to a slowing down in hiring new staff, and is forecast to drop to 10 per cent in 2017.
The board has declared a fully imputed final dividend of 9 cents per share to be paid on September 20.
Macdonald said total revenue is expected to grow at a similar rate in 2017 to this year in percentage terms, mainly through the general items marketplace and classified businesses repaying the increased investment. Profit growth is expected to be higher than this year, as expenses ease.
Trade Me's fledgling insurance business, which offers home, contents, and car insurance, is now in a position where it can be scaled up this after a year of putting an offer into the market and fine-tuning it, Macdonald said.
New goods now account for around half of Trade Me's transactions though the average sale price is higher for used goods due to bigger ticket items being sold. But Macdonald expects new goods retailing to continue to grow faster than used goods in 2017 with annual growth in overall online retail spend by kiwis in excess of 10 per cent per annum.