Savvy brands and businesses need to start planning their marketing pushes as early in the fall as possible in order to ensure the best saturation of their holiday marketing campaign blasts. The key is to maximize coverage without oversaturating or burning out customers both existing and potential.
Think the “holiday season” means the time period between Thanksgiving and Christmas? You couldn’t be more wrong. You could find your sales suffering if you project your holiday window so narrowly.
The holiday season window begins as far back as Halloween, and now extends even further past Christmas.
Shoppers are always looking for the best deals, and they’re starting to look for them earlier every year.
Do store shelves need to be stocked with menorahs and nativity scenes as far back as October 1? No. The products you stock may not be as important as how you prepare your audience to receive those products.
Far from being months away, the holidays actually start now.
Start Planning Your Holiday Calendar Now
If you haven’t already laid out a calendar for how your holiday should go, then you should start planning one right away.
Knowing what you plan to do and when will help take off the pressure as you get closer to key dates of the holiday season. Plus, it will help you answer questions such as: “When should I launch my email campaigns?” “When do I want to start running paid ads on the search engines?” “Is my holiday gift guide ready for launch on my website?”
It doesn’t necessarily need to have granular detail, though obviously more is better when it comes to planning in advance. However, even an overarching framework of how you’d like your holiday marketing to go will give you a leg up over anyone who doesn’t even start their planning until mid-October.
Be sure to consider every aspect of your digital marketing, including email, social networking, organic search rankings, and paid advertising.
Holiday Shopping Really Starts Before Halloween
If the research is coming from Google, you know it’s legitimate. A study released by a research branch of the search giant back in 2014 reported that more than a quarter of shoppers started before Halloween.
You can expect that more people will start their shopping earlier this year, as holiday figures tend to go up each year except in the case of serious recession, which doesn’t look to be in the forecast for this fall. We could see upwards of 30 percent of shoppers starting their holiday gift-buying before spooky skeletons have even left store shelves.
Shoppers won’t stop once Christmas is over, either. Savvy shoppers know that retailers with excess inventory will be looking to keep sales going likely through New Year’s Day.
If you’re looking to lock in shoppers who are looking for a deal, they’ll be hunting for it after the Christmas rush, during this crucial week before Q4 closes out. Which means that you’re not done come Boxing Day (December 26 for anyone not familiar with this holiday primarily celebrated east of the pond) – you need to be ready for one last marketing push that will last you through the first few days of January.
The Highest Spending Dates Might Surprise You
What are the biggest spending days of each holiday season? Black Friday and Cyber Monday, right?
Well, you’d be correct at least about Cyber Monday, especially when it comes to shopping online. But Black Friday actually isn’t one of the top three biggest online spending days, and knowing what those three are should be of prime importance for any online business.
In 2014, Cyber Monday brought in over $2 billion in sales on desktop computers. The next two days were a little more obscure: the first Tuesday of December (December 2nd) came in second place with nearly $1.8 billion in desktop sales, while “Green Monday,” December 8th, came in third with $1.6 billion in desktop sales.
Other dates of note were peppered throughout December, such as the 12th, the 3rd, and the 16th. Not even “Free Shipping Day” on the 18th could compare to any of those days with its $926 million haul.
Of course, dates outside of December matter, too. Thanksgiving is another key shopping day online.
The takeaway here is that knowing your key dates is half the game, and those key dates are unlikely to be what you expect. Just going with your gut won’t be enough, nor will relying entirely on experiences of how shoppers behave in-store. You’ll need to know how they behave online, and you’ll need to do your homework and study on on when they’re likeliest to spend big.
It’s A Marathon & Not A Race. You Can’t Afford To Burn Out.
Have you ever felt the burn out associated with getting bombarded with too many sales pitches, or sales pitches that were just too aggressive?
Around the holiday season, we all know the advertising can get a little too aggressive. Even the most receptive amongst us can start tuning things out. That’s why you need to think of holiday marketing as a marathon, not a race.
Sprinting toward the end and pushing everything you’ve got as hard as you can all the time will only burn you out and fatigue your customers, potentially ruining their good will. There’s no worse outcome than burning bridges with the audience you rely upon to not only buy your products but to be your brand ambassadors and support your services by word of mouth.
You don’t need to necessarily follow the “slow” part of the “slow and steady” idiom, but definitely focus on the steady. You want to dole out your content at a measured, reliable pace, and focus on personalization and careful segmentation of that content. The more targeted to your customers’ needs, the better.
Content that’s timely and relevant will be appreciated, building good will and raising the probability of clicks and conversions. A steady drip of content also means a much lower risk of running out of high quality content to spend over the course of this Q4.
Don’t scrape the bottom of the barrel. You really want to focus on quality, not quantity, because it’s the quality that people will remember.
Be Ready For The Long Haul
“The holiday season” really translates as “your entire Q4,” if you’re playing your cards right. More than that, actually, if you’re starting your planning in September (which you should be).
As tiring as that might seem, you’ll be thanking yourself in January when you’re reaping the rewards of an incredibly successful holiday season. So get ready to bring on that Christmakwanzakah cheer – the next 100 or so days, if you’re doing it right, you’re going to be busy.