December 15, 2005
There is slighlty more than a week left until Christmas Day and as
the holiday shopping season draws to a close, eCommerce merchants and
eTailers are smiling. Also, offline stores and retailers are preparing
for the annual Saturday last-minute surge.
Overall, buying on the Internet has been busy since Thanksgiving.
Shopping.com reported Wednesday that every day since Black Friday (the
day after Thanksgiving) Web traffic at its site has in fact exceeded
the single biggest traffic day recorded last year.
Yahoo Shopping also announced earlier this week that traffic there
had risen 45 to 55 percent since Black Friday, far exceeding the
company's expectations of 25 to 30 percent at the start of the holiday
season.
Those "Internet Trips" are cleaverly being converted into dollars
for eCommerce retailers, according to the most recent Shop.org/BizRate
Research eHoliday Mood Study.
Of the more than one hundred online merchants surveyed in that
poll, 58 percent said their sales increased 30 percent or more during the
first two weeks of the nation's seasonal potlatch.
Not surprisingly, the mood study found among online merchants a good
uptick in optimism. Some 31 percent said they were "very optimistic" now
about holiday sales, compared to 24 percent in September.
"What's made this year unique is how aggressive retailers are with
promotions compared to last year," said Scott Silverman, executive director
of Shop.org.
"The one that stands out," he said, "is free shipping with
conditions." Helen Malani, chief shopping expert with Los Angeles-based
Shopzilla, added, "Retailers know that consumers respond exceedingly
well to free shipping."
"It's the number one incentive for closing a deal online," she told
the E-Commerce Times.
But as online sales peak -- a 'plateau' that corresponds
historically to the last day a gift can be delivered before Christmas
-- attention will be focused on offline retailers, who traditionally
see a tsunami of shopping the week before Santa takes his annual sleigh
ride.
"We get a big boom in sales at the front end and another boom at the
back end," said Lynn Franco, director of the consumer research center at The
Conference Board, a global research and business membership organization
based in New York City.
That boom will be needed if offline retailers are to meet pre-season
predictions that their sales would jump 6 to 6.5 percent during the
holidays. Some prognosticators -- like the International Council of
Shopping Centers -- peg sales at half that -- 3 to 3.5 percent.
A three percent increase is "not bad, but it's not great," according
to Franco. On the other hand, the specter of that increase could bode
well for last-minute shoppers.
Asked if bricks-and-mortar merchants will crank up the discounts
to get people into the stores over the next 10 days, Franco
responded: "I think they will because there's some apprehension
lingering that sales have not been as robust as they would like them
to be.
In order to entice people in, they're going to have to rev up the
promotions and the bargains."
The question remains, however, will promotions and bargains be
enough to entice shoppers into their cars for a trip to the malls.
According to a Conference Board study released yesterday, one out of
every three households told surveyors that rising energy prices would
alter their holiday shopping this season.
Moreover, the survey noted that more than half of all consumers said
that they would be making fewer trips to the mall this year. That need
not deflate the hopes of offline merchants for a slam-bang finish to
the holiday season, according to Franco.
"Consumers may be more selective as to when they make their trips
so they might be saving their trips until next week," she hypothesized.
Bricks and mortar retailers will benefit from another shopping trend: procrastination.
"The trend is that consumers are shopping later and later, both offline and online," said Patty Freeman Evans, a retail analyst with Jupiter Research.
"I would expect that trend to continue and for next week to be a very heavy shopping week," she said. "Saturday may be the biggest day, but it's going to be a heavy week all week for offline."
Source: eCommerce Times
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