FEATURE-From shrimp to fake eyelashes, social media sales soar in Facebook-friendly Thailand

* Thai sales via social media more than doubled in 2017

* Such sales accounted for 44% of Thai e-commerce, up from 21%

* Thais like browsing, direct communication with merchants

By Chayut Setboonsarng

SATUN, Thailand, July 1 (Reuters) - The son of a Thai fisherman, Anurak Saruethai never really took to life at sea. But seafood has been good to him.

Hawking dried shrimp, squid and fish in nightly Facebook livestreams, Anurak, who is quick with a joke and adept at interacting with customers, can draw up to 300,000 viewers at a time.

He's backed by a team who help respond to orders, answer questions on Facebook Messenger, monitor payments to his bank account and shout out tag lines off camera for comedic effect.

The formula works so well, Anurak says he made 26 million baht ($829,000) in sales in March alone.

"Facebook and Instagram give people an opportunity. If you do it right with good content, in just seven months you can make millions," he told Reuters from the seaside village of Satun.

His success is emblematic of booming social media commerce in Thailand where entrepreneurs sell products directly to customers via Facebook, Instagram and messaging apps like Japan's Line Corp.

Propelled by upgrades to mobile banking apps, sales via social media in Thailand more than doubled to 334.2 billion baht ($10.9 billion) in 2017, according to the latest report from the country's Electronic Transaction Development Agency.

Moreover, those sales accounted for 44% of e-commerce in Southeast Asia's second-biggest economy, jumping from 21% a year earlier. Since then, banks have dropped transfer fees, likely driving the market further.

The popularity of so-called social commerce in Thailand owes much to the relatively late arrival of big e-commerce firms, cultural shopping preferences and the wide use of Facebook and Instagram. Some 38 million people or 57% of the population access Facebook every day, according to the U.S. firm.

Its growth also highlights the global business opportunities for Facebook and its Instagram unit.

"Social commerce is a market to monitor because Facebook has moved more sharply in a commerce direction recently with the launch of many commerce friendly features," said Alessandro Psicini, co-founder of Crea which advises brands that want to boost their social media sales in Thailand.

Facebook said this month it wanted to expand into payments and launch its own coin. Instagram in March introduced a checkout button which allows users to shop without leaving the app, though that function is currently limited to a small number of brands and U.S. consumers.