Wednesday, November 19, 2008

Black Friday deals: Do they work for the retailer?

The US holiday retail season this year is expected to be the worst in the past few decades. Many retailers have started offering Black Friday discounts in advance.

The website Black Friday Ads tracks some of the hottest discount deals being offered by retailers. They have a page which tracks the scanned advertisements of most big US retailers. Some retailers are offering online deals at prices below Black Friday prices.

I couldn't help wondering how retailers can use analytics to maximize their Black Friday sales and gross margins. Here are some suggestions :
  • Designing the black friday deals:
  1. Analyze market surveys to understand what products people want to buy during Black friday (computers, HD TVs, iPods, hard disk drives, digital cameras, GPS devices, clothes, toys) this year
  2. Benchmark prices against competition based on information available daily to ensure that you have enough traffic-pullers...these get the people into the stores.
  3. Ensure that your deals are spread across the aisles/ departments. This ensures that customers are exposed to more categories whil picking up the doorbuster items and that all doorbuster products are not picked up just by the first few customers. An analysis of previous years' transaction data will yield numbers on how many customers got a doorbuster product (typically a few hundred per store) and how each of these customers moved through the aisles.
  • After Black Friday: Analyze the baskets of transactions during Black Friday:
  1. Customers who buy doorbuster products often pick up other items that may not have significant discount. Calculate the sales and gross margin on baskets that have a doorbuster product. Retailers often lose money on the first customers in line.
  2. Customers often come in after the doorbuster products are sold (Each store usually stocks 5-15 units of each doorbuster). They often pick up products with lower discounts. To calculate the halo effect of the discount, calculate the sales and gross margin lift for Black Friday baskets without a doorbuster product
  3. So long as the total of the above has positive sales and margin impact, the retailer made money on the Black Friday deals.
  4. The learning from Black Friday can be used to better structure deals for the rest of the holiday season.

This season, retailers may have to resort to a long period of discounting with dynamic moves based on competition and sales performance on a daily basis. Getting the process of discount pricing will be very critical.

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