Thanksgiving, Black Friday, Cyber Monday, Free Shipping Day… the (Shopping) Holidays are almost here, my friend.
The "Holy Grail Period" of sales & discounts is so close that you can smell the marketing in the air.
Marketers will go nuts during this period just because they know lots of sales are to be made, consumerism is at its best, and everyone wants a slice of the pie valued at billions and billions of dollars.
If you are reading this article only now, you still have a chance to get your piece of the pie, even though some marketers start promoting Holidays offers in late October or early November, Halloween has usually been used as a reference to kickstart this type of action.
To set you up with a plan for this magic time of the year, we will talk about:
No 3rd party integrations. No hidden costs. No wasted time.
Just a solution as unique as your business’s needs.
Here are the days you should care about the most:
11 days that have some kind of theme you can explore.
So, you can start drafting already your Holidays Marketing Plan. Build great content, eye-candy designs, and slick ads around these themes.
Of course, you shouldn't neglect any day between these Shopping Fiestas, but because most consumers expect great offers on these days, you should make sure you have everything prepared to maximize your results.
Each day has its specific theme, so they can help you understand what kind of people will buy stuff on that day. This way, you can target specific types of customers, depending on their needs, profiles, and context:
EXTRA TIP: add some scarcity to your offers.
"There is distinctive psychology of scarcity, argues Mr. Mullainathan and Eldar Shafir, a psychologist at Princeton University. People's minds work differently when they feel they lack something. And it does not greatly matter what that something is. Anyone who feels strapped for money, friends, time, or calories is likely to succumb to a similar "scarcity mindset".
This mindset brings two benefits. It concentrates the mind on pressing needs. It also gives people a keener sense of the value of a dollar, minute, calorie, or smile. The lonely, it turns out, are better at deciphering expressions of emotion".
People will be bombed with marketing messages, offers, discounts, and bundles, so you better make sure you leverage all psychological factors, including scarcity.
Offer limited deals to incentivize users to take action right after they check out your offer. People fear more what they can lose than what they stand to win. So maybe you can use a "puppy dog close" strategy. Don't know what that is?
The "puppy dog close" is a famous example where pet store owners let indecisive families "try out" a puppy over the weekend. Rarely are those puppies ever returned.
So if you sell SaaS, maybe you could give out a free month of access if they claim their offer and start using your product before Christmas.
Adobe did us a favor, and they tracked the visits from 500 big internet retailers and pulled some data that can help us understand how to best plan the efforts for this year.
If you didn't start your marketing efforts already, you can use the calendar in the article, and use the data below to better understand where to focus most of your efforts.
Granted, those websites may not be selling software, but they are selling a lot of electronics, and electronics may need your software to enhance their capabilities.
Maybe you can use the information in this article to plan something fast and collect your piece of the pie.
From their analysis, Adobe generated the stats below, and you can see that Cyber Monday may be the best day ever for Internet Retailers.
But, not everyone is selling the same amount of merchandise. The average retailer sells four times as much merchandise, but the top percentile of retailers sells as much as six times worth of merchandise.
What does it mean for you, it means that you plan your efforts in the right way, you can experience similar results because retailers also sell software.
I'm sure the retailers selling more items don't just have better offers, but they also target the right people with the right offers at the right time.
What will improve your marketing is segmenting your email lists.
There are various criteria to segment your list, but it's very straightforward to say that the more segmented your email list is, the easier it is to manage.
By breaking your list into smaller chunks, you can find better ways to deliver laser-targeted campaigns with increased chances of leads and sales.
So, segment your list by convincing subscribers to complete a survey or confronting email list data with purchase or CRM data.
No matter what method you choose to segment your list (it depends on the industry), remember to focus on what matters for each specific sector.
If you feel segmenting your current list is too hard, maybe you should start collecting already segmented leads.
You can use Padiact to target people based on their browsing behavior, and you can collect emails from people more likely to convert into customers.
This way, segmenting your big list into smaller but more compact lists can be less stressful.
Just because Christmas will be gone doesn't mean you should stop acting like it isn't Christmas anymore.
There's a lot of money to be made post-holidays because people are starting to use their newly bought gadgets and realize that they need some tools to achieve certain results.
For example, if people get a camera for Christmas, they first learn how to use it, record clips, and try to experiment with different features of the camera. Then they want to make a montage or something like that, so they start researching software that can help them join clips together, add visual effects, sync video with music and do all sorts of goofy stuff.
So, January, February, and even March can be great months for sales if you plan your strategy well.
You can be very sleek about your email marketing and create a Holiday follow-up series, deliver tutorials on how to use your software for people to learn how to do what they want, and also test out your software.
If your product is dependent on hardware that takes a little more time to get used to, maybe you should make sure you don't max out on your good offers during the holidays and at least have some special discounts for people that don't buy software the next day after they got their gadgets.
No 3rd party integrations. No hidden costs. No wasted time.
Just a solution as unique as your business’s needs.
Is your head spinning already?
It should be.
Planning your holiday marketing efforts is hard work, and the sooner you get it done, the more time you have to A/B test your subject lines, offers, designs, timeframes, and other elements.
So, this year put more focus on planning your campaign and try to deliver the right offer, at the right time, to the right customers, and for sure, you can achieve better results than last year and maybe sell more software than ever before.