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You are here: Home / Archives for Black Friday

Black Friday

Black Friday: What Happened This Year?

March 11, 2016 By Twila Van Leer

Well, the annual bacchanalia of holiday bargains has come and gone. Whether it was the standard grab-for-the-goodies frenzy or a ho-hum just another day depended to a large degree on where in the country you are located.

As predicted, some of the oomph of the post-Thanksgiving spree has eased, with fewer shoppers willing to brave the early hours and crowds, reports from around the country indicate. In some locales, demonstrators piggy-backed on the opportunity to attract a crowd. And some people opted to stay home and peruse the ads in newspapers or online before making spending decisions.

Bottom line, according to an Associated Press rundown, crowds this year seemed to be smaller than in the past. But there were variations on the theme in some places.

Colorado

In Colorado, which legalized marijuana recently, discounted weed and specially wrapped holiday combinations were on sale for the Black Friday crowd. In traditionally snowy Denver weather, some crowds lined up and braved the cold to get in on the weed deals.

Chicago

Some Chicagoans linked arms and tried to block traffic into stores in protest of the shooting of a teenager in their city. In some of the stores, employees safely ushered shoppers out of side doors to prevent possible clashes with the protestors. Some of the shoppers took it all in stride and used their smartphones to photograph the event.

Kansas City

Some shoppers who have reveled in the competition and excitement of Black Fridays past were actually disappointed to find themselves in stores without crowds. One woman in Kansas City listlessly shuffled through racks of clothing and wondered where the fun went.

Arizona

In sunny Arizona, people told news reporters they preferred hiking in the saguaro-studded hills rubbing elbows with crowds of shoppers. For some like-minded non-shoppers, it was an opportunity to impress upon children the true meaning of the holidays, one Tucson mother was reported as saying.

Online

As technology takes over more and more of the country’s shopping functions, the experts reported that – as predicted- more retail shoppers used their phones than their desktop computers to order goods. The option of sitting at home quietly digesting the Thanksgiving turkey while ordering online rather than facing the mobs in stores, seemed to make even more inroads into the Black Friday events.

Big Retailers

Even with the slight slackening of Black Friday traffic, some of the nation’s biggest retailers reported brisk sales. WalMart reps reported that its stores dotting the country saw increased sales this year, both in the stores and online, over last year. Ditto Target, which racked up a record in online sales, particularly electronics. Business in Target’s stores also was satisfactory, spokesmen said. Penneys put considerable effort pre-season into making its apps more user-friendly and said the results were good. It was apparent that many shoppers were researching online then going to the stores for purchases, a spokesperson said.

Black Friday may be losing a little of its luster, but don’t count it out yet as a holiday event of great magnitude.

Filed Under: Christmas Shopping, Shopping Tips Tagged With: Black Friday, Christmas shopping, internet business

Black Friday, Cyber Monday – And the Rest

November 28, 2014 By Sherry Tingley

Wal-Mart said Thursday, Nov. 28, 2014  was its second-highest online sales day ever after last year's Cyber Monday, which is the Monday following Thanksgiving when online retailers promote bargains.
Wal-Mart said Thursday, Nov. 28, 2014 was its second-highest online sales day ever after last year’s Cyber Monday, which is the Monday following Thanksgiving when online retailers promote bargains.
For years, the commonly accepted wisdom for shoppers is that Black Friday is THE day for holiday deals. Not necessarily true.

While that Friday and its electronics copycat Cyber Monday are packed with bargains, experience shows that there are even greater opportunities on both sides of those days. For instance, thousands of shoppers take time out from turkey on Thanksgiving Day to hit the stores, jam-packed tummies notwithstanding. One survey conducted by DealNews showed that the price breaks on Thanksgiving were better than those on the following day. In a month already noted for sales, it stuck out

Not only that, but the stores offered deals on more of the most-wanted items likely to be on holiday shopping lists, the analysts found.

The advice of experts is to begin looking for deals before the turkey is thawed. Like, say, right now. The holiday shopping period long outgrew single days. All of November is dedicated to the best deals of the year.

DealNews found that Cyber Monday sales last year lagged Thanksgiving by 16 percent, but that it offers more top-shelf bargains than stores that don’t deal primarily in e-commerce items. The research organization suggests that those looking for e-commerce deals also begin shopping the ads before the traditional days.

The circulars will soon be flooding homes. Peruse the ads and if you spot a wanted item that fits your budget, don’t wait for a better deal. DealNews editors and other market-watchers post sales critiques as the annual frenzy begins.

Filed Under: Shopping Tips Tagged With: Black Friday

Black Friday Perks Of The Season

November 28, 2014 By Twila Van Leer

Walmart report that 22 million shoppers went through their stores on Thanksgiving day in 2014.
Walmart report that 22 million shoppers went through their stores on Thanksgiving day in 2014.
Black Friday is changing. Stores are spreading their holiday bargains over more days and shoppers are looking for deals earlier than they used to, or even later, as the gurus predict a long season of specials. Some even have rewritten the term Black Friday to Black November.

Bankrate.com, an organization that tracks spending habits among Americans, did a survey of 1,000 adults and found that only 28 percent had plans to rise early and hit the stores on Black Friday. The figure rises to 40 percent if you count the online shoppers.

Many retailers are simply swapping Thanksgiving Day for the day after, getting a jump on the Black Friday event. Major discounts are being offered before the turkey cools. Among those retailers planning to make the early dive into the shopping frenzy are Walmart, Target, Amazon and Toys R Us.

The early sales are a bonus for shoppers who like to avoid the dense crowds that have characterized Black Friday. They are making their plans to avoid the super-shopping day, rather than being in the midst of it. The over-stuffed stores of the past have helped push the move to spread the bargain days over a longer period, the experts say.

Of course, there are those who thrive on the push-and-pull of big crowds and count it as a part of the holiday fun. They’ll be there for Black Friday early and stay late, the survey said.

Cyber Monday, the electronics equivalent of Black Friday, will attract even fewer shoppers, the Bankrate.com poll indicated, with only one four folks looking for techie bargains expecting to hit the specialty stores. And they said they will spend less than in the past, an average of $361, compared with $399 last time around.

The Consumer Electronics Association estimates that some 6 million more shoppers will join the online shopping than last year, when some 103 million shopped online. The record number is expected to keep the ordering hot throughout the Thanksgiving weekend. Three quarters of them are expected to use a mobile device to do their shopping, the association says.

The hot-ticket tech items for the year include TVs, laptops, tablet, iPads, Xbox One, Playstation 4 and Call of Duty.

So rev up your engines, put the turkey on hold for just a short time and join the 2014 version of shop-‘til-you-drop.

Filed Under: Christmas Shopping, Shopping Tips Tagged With: Black Friday

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