Justify "too good to be true" discounts by tying them to real-life events, both positive (birthdays, holidays) and negative (unexpected bills, damaged goods). This authenticity makes the offer more believable and compelling to customers, increasing conversion.

Related Insights

Offer a significant, permanent discount exclusively to customers who sign up before a product or location officially launches. This creates urgency and scarcity, driving a large influx of initial customers and ensuring immediate profitability from day one.

Instead of offering a fake, expiring discount to create urgency, frame it as a payment for predictability. Tell the prospect you will pay them a discount in exchange for mutually aligning on a specific close date, which helps you forecast accurately. This turns a sales tactic into a valuable business exchange.

Move beyond generic discounts by framing offers around the customer's immediate, often unspoken, intent. For example, a "last minute hero finder" speaks directly to the urgency of holiday shopping, while a "donation impact calculator" targets the specific motivations of year-end charitable giving, making the offer more compelling.

For consumers under 35, cart abandonment is no longer just a sign of friction—it's a deliberate strategy to solicit a discount. Brands relying on standard ESPs miss most of these high-intent moments, while identity resolution can increase identification of these opportunities by up to 10x.

An offer that seems too good to be true will be met with skepticism and ignored, even if it's genuine. To make an extreme offer believable, you must provide a compelling reason, such as a "going out of business" sale, to justify the discount and overcome prospect distrust.

When you increase your BFCM discount (e.g., from 20% to 35%), don't turn off high-performing ads that mention the lower discount. A customer clicking an ad for 20% off and discovering a 35% offer on-site is a pleasant surprise that boosts conversion.

When stacking value in an offer, don't just add random bonuses. Strategically design each bonus to address a specific, predictable customer objection, such as 'I don't have time' or 'This seems too complex.' This transforms value-stacking from a generic tactic into a precise conversion tool.

Instead of offering a standard discount to all abandoning shoppers, AI analyzes individual behavior to determine the precise, minimum percentage off needed to secure the conversion. This maximizes sales while preventing unnecessary margin erosion.

To make a sale irresistible, your offer must contain five key elements: a clear transformation (outcome), rapid delivery (speed), fear removal (risk reversal), a reason to buy now (scarcity), and a proprietary method for achieving the result (unique mechanism).

Brands running one static Black Friday deal all November see consumer interest wane. The most successful brands introduce a significantly better offer on Thanksgiving evening, creating a massive revenue spike by tapping into learned consumer behavior of waiting for the best deal.