4 Sales and Promotional Ideas to Increase Holiday Revenue
| The winter holidays are one of the most crucial sales periods for retailers. Some of the biggest sales days of the year happen in the two months leading up to the new year, setting businesses up with the capital to grow. Are you ready? Do you have your sales and promotional ideas planned out? Here are 4 Sales and Promotional Ideas to Increase Holiday Revenue.
In an increasingly competitive market, it’s not enough to set some storewide discounts and call it a day. You need to excite shoppers with your holiday sales and time them right so you end up with maximum profits and minimum leftover inventory. In this post, we’ll talk about:
The most important sales dates for the holidaysYou could turn holiday sales on for all of November and December, and indeed, you probably should have some discounts going all season. But some days are more important than others, with holiday shopping peaking at predictable times throughout the season. These are the days you need to base your holiday sale ideas around—your tent poles for drawing in customers. Black Friday, Small Business Saturday, and Cyber MondayKnown as BFCM (or, more recently, Cyber Five), the American Thanksgiving to Cyber Monday period represents a blitz of sales that kick off the holiday period. These days are some of the biggest shopping periods of the year. Typically, customers look for steep deals in-store on Black Friday, shop at their local retailers on Saturday, and finish out the week with online sales on Monday. Some shopping starts on Thanksgiving, though the era of in-store Thanksgiving sales seems to be ending, making it more of an eCom-heavy day. Competition is heavy and the potential revenue is high. Retailers brought in $12.16 billion in online sales on Cyber Monday in 2020. Free Shipping DayFree Shipping Day is a day in mid-December when retailers offer free shipping on items meant to arrive by Christmas Eve. The day started as a formal event by FreeShippingDay.org in 2008 and has been going strong since. In 2021, Free Shipping Day will fall on December 14. Whether or not your business formally signs up for the event, online shoppers will be looking for fast free shipping on the 14th, so it’s in your best interest to offer it (and advertise that you are). Super SaturdaySuper Saturday is the last Saturday before Christmas. For many customers, it represents the end of their shopping season. Retailers typically bring in sales to rival Black Friday. Because Super Saturday falls so close to the holidays, it’s historically been a bigger day for brick and mortar sales than online sales. While in-store Super Saturday sales dropped last year thanks to the pandemic, it stands to make a comeback this year, especially if you’re offering ways to buy online and pick up in-store. Boxing DayBoxing Day, the day after Christmas, has been a sales hit in Canada for years now. It’s been slower to catch on in the United States, but some retailers have started to offer Boxing Day discounts, and end-of-year sales are a tried and true tradition. You can use these sales to clear out your inventory—you don’t want stale holiday merchandise on your shelves come January, after all. Four sales and promotional ideas for the holidaysNow that you have your important dates penciled in, what kinds of sale ideas will draw customers to your store? Luckily, the answers aren’t complicated—you just need to set them up and decide how they’ll work for your store. Here are four sale ideas you can use for the holidays. 1. Buy one, get one free saleAh, the classics—everyone likes a good BOGO sale. 66% of shoppers like it the most out of any type of promotion. It’s a win-win for retailers and customers, after all. Holiday shoppers can stock up on gifts while you make a larger profit than if you’d held a half-off sale. BOGO sales move inventory effectively by giving shoppers a deal they can’t pass up. If Super Saturday is coming up and you have more stock than you’d like, roll one out to move those last-minute gifts. If you have excess stock after Christmas, make your Boxing Day and end-of-year sales BOGO-centric to clean out your shelves and make room for exciting new merchandise in January. Don’t jump the gun on a BOGO sale, though. While they’re good for getting attention, if an item is able to sell multiple units at full price, you don’t need a BOGO sale to clear the shelves. That’s why it can be a good idea to roll these sales out once you have an idea of how fast your holiday stock is selling. 2. Quantity discountsThis sale idea rewards customers for buying more. Holiday shoppers could buy four bottles of wine and get a discount on each bottle, or they could buy five pairs of socks and get a discount on their overall total. The specific flavor of sale is up to you. The key to success here is to pick the gifts customers will realistically buy in bulk. If it’s more likely that most customers will buy a maximum of two, you might have more success with a BOGO sale instead. Try setting quantity discounts on smaller items and stocking stuffers, or on gifts, someone would want to receive more than one of, like golf balls or liquor. Quantity discounts are relatively timeless. They’ll help you move inventory throughout the holiday season, so set them early and run them until the new year. |
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