While brands can create products with a sophisticated, coastal aesthetic (NY, LA), true scale comes from marketing that appeals to the "center of America." Tactics like cash-back raffles or product giveaways resonate strongly with this demographic and drive mass adoption.
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.
Don't worry that BFCM shoppers are low-LTV "bargain hunters." The primary goal of the holiday sales period isn't acquiring loyal customers; it's maximizing revenue and boosting your overall blended ROAS. Focus on top-of-funnel acquisition in the months leading up to November.
Platforms like Zagged use a "clipping" strategy, where hundreds of creators post UGC-style videos about a product. This floods platforms like TikTok with seemingly organic content, generating huge top-of-funnel awareness at extremely low CPMs ($3-4) and lowering blended CPAs.
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.
During BFCM, consumer inboxes are flooded. To break through, brands should send multiple emails per day, including resends (e.g., 3 scheduled emails plus a resend for each). The incremental revenue gained from this high frequency justifies the potential increase in spam complaints.
Data shows a predictable drop in shopper intent from roughly November 7th to 20th. Brands should run an initial early November sale, then strategically pull back ad spend during this "dead zone" to preserve budget for the main BFCM push starting around the 21st.
