Showing posts with label holiday sale. Show all posts
Showing posts with label holiday sale. Show all posts

Thursday, November 5, 2015

5 Creative Holiday Promotion Ideas for Retailers

Written by Square, Inc. for Retail Minded.


By now, Black Friday has become a holiday of sorts (you know, the kind of holiday where people get up crazy-early and spend a lot of money), but your seasonal promotions shouldn’t begin and end with the day after Thanksgiving. (Besides, you should be focusing on eating leftovers that day.)


Get creative with your holiday sales! That doesn’t mean you should overthink it. After all, it’s just a fact that people are going to be shopping this time of year. But you should try to set yourself apart in a way that feels true to your business and your customers. Here are some ways to attract customers with sweet holiday deals.
  1. Friendsgiving

Get a jump on the “official” holiday shopping season by hosting a promotion the weekend before Thanksgiving. Email your customers an invite (Square’s email marketing software has a template for events) to blow off some pre-Thanksgiving steam and avoid the Black Friday madness with cocktails and stellar deals to share with friends. For example, when a customer makes a purchase, she gets a card to share an additional discount with a friend. Make sure to offer discounts across the board (after all, you don’t want to alienate loyal, if solo, shoppers). Read more tips on how to market your event.
  1. Ugly Sweater Day

Tacky holiday sweaters aren’t just for parties anymore: Bring a fun, festive element into what can be a stressful time by inviting customers to wear their loudest, trippiest, most sartorially unfortunate sweaters into your store. When they do, offer them a storewide discount. And, if you’re a clothing store, think about offering a special deal on sweaters that don’t look like costumes. You can also add a charitable element by asking customers to donate gently used (and not ugly) sweaters for a store discount.
  1. Retail Therapy

The most wonderful time of the year can also be the most stressful, so invite customers to indulge in a little “me” time by offering mini spa treatments. Pick a weekend day in the thick of the shopping season for their choice of a chair massage, nail polish change, or makeup touch-up when they make a minimum purchase. Try to partner with a local salon and spa to set up a mutually beneficial relationship.
  1. Procrastinators’ Party

Turn last-minute shopping into an event with saved-the-best-for-last deals and offers. Turn the last weekend before Christmas into a party with cookies, hot chocolate (or bubbly), and complimentary gift wrapping on items purchased in the store that day.
  1. New Year’s Shopping

The boom of holiday shopping is always followed by the inevitable bust of a sales slump. To avoid a complete New Year’s sales meltdown, buy yourself an insurance policy in the form of store-issued gift cards that customers can’t use until January. When customers spend a certain amount through the end of December, thank them for their purchases and loyalty with a Square gift card in the amount of your choosing. Then, once January rolls around (and your new merchandise rolls in), customers can cash in their store credit — and then some.

To View Original Article: https://retailminded.com/5-creative-holiday-promotion-ideas-for-retailers/

Sunday, November 1, 2015

Sound solutions for dealing with overstocked seasonal goods and the people who love them

By Donald Clark

Timing is everything when it comes to seasonal merchandise. One day after the holiday, it’s not going to sell for much more than 50% of the full retail price. When I owned my shop, this was a constant struggle that impacted not just holiday-specific merchandise, but also the larger inventory of regular merchandise that was brought in for the fourth quarter. I recently was asked by a beginning retailer, “How did you handle this? How did you deal with having to lower prices?” My answer was: “I did it smartly and strategically.”

Timing and Tracking

I always found that determining when to discount—and what to reduce—was a project for a calendar. I used large monthly pages taped to the wall so I could think quarterly. I could see the flow of the weeks and establish a countdown and decide when to put goods out, when to emphasize specific products, and when to plan on a clearance sale.

Each year, the big players push holiday displays forward. At this point, Christmas and Halloween actually collide. We “creative types” know that orange and red and green are not great together. We shouldn’t have a mechanical wicked witch flying on her broomstick, narrowly missing Santa in his reindeer sleigh. It’s just not right! (Plus, the witch and her nasty bats really scare the elves.)
My personal preference is for a smart retailer to have Christmas and holiday products on the floor two weeks before Thanksgiving. Put your Christmas merchandise out in mid November. This allows you to familiarize your staff with the new goods and to tweak displays, as needed. You’ll be able to gauge what has caught your customers’ eyes and (hopefully) their wallets as well.

With this advance placement, you all will be ready to go the weekend after Thanksgiving when the buying fever typically sets in. By doing this, you will also be able to engage browsers, and they’re really active this time of year too. I’m talking about the people who come out to stroll through shops and rubberneck enthusiastically rather than buy. Hopefully, they’ll see things in your store and they will return to purchase in the weeks leading up to December 25.

holiday sale

Start Spreading the News

Awareness of buying patterns in general and specifically your customers’ buying patterns will let you tailor your promotional plan to insure the most profitable season. You’ll want to use digital, print, and perhaps even radio to get the word out. You’ll have to tailor this to best fit your perception of your customers’ use of the media.

Use your wall calendar to determine when to talk about what in the media. Don’t forget to use signage in the shop to promote items and to announce what’s coming up. Hopefully, you use a Point of Purchase system that will record all sales by department. If not, perhaps your register has enough departments so you can ring items into the department you have assigned them.

This information will be invaluable when it’s time to establish “open to buys” for the next season. Actually, as you accumulate this information, you can use it to establish your buying budget for the year.

Marking Their Territory

There is definitely a pattern to the holiday-buying cycles. At the outset, you’ll see the above-mentioned serious browsers. They have to see everything available before making decisions. Gift buying begins early, as does the purchase of greeting cards. Stationery and cards with a holiday theme are bought in earnest during the Thanksgiving weekend and the week right after that. These holiday greeting cards have to be written out, addressed, stamped, and mailed by customers. Keep this in mind if you are setting up displays of Christmas and Hanukkah boxed cards. Depending on how many you have ordered and displayed, they have a shot of selling out before the holiday begins.
Sales of decorations, ornaments, wrapping paper, and other merchandise kick in as the holiday draws closer. A few days before the holiday, you’ll get the last-minute crew. This is heavily weighted toward men, who will purchase nearly anything to get it over with. This is a sad fact of life—it’s not just a “wacky” stereotype established in sitcoms or TV commercials.

On the first open-for-business day after the holiday, the bargain hunters are out in force. It was always profitable for us to have the markdowns ready on that day. We knew that within a day or two, the big push would be over. People sometimes wait all year for these reductions and discounts. Many times they use their recently received holiday cash for swooping up sales items, or they use their gift cards for your store to buy these items they longed to acquire during the past months.

Final Word to the Wise

My last bit of sound advice—and it might be the most pungent—if you feel you may have too much holiday merchandise, or general merchandise that hasn’t sold well, consider reducing it for the last few days BEFORE the holiday. Taking 20% and 25% off sure beats 50%.

To View Original Article: http://smart-retailer.com/growyourbiz/holiday-headaches-sound-solutions-for-dealing-with-overstocked-seasonal-goods-and-the-people-who-love-them/