During a holiday season already reporting a 12% boost in online shopping, Friday's third annual Free Shipping Day could prove one of the busiest days of all for shoppers and merchants alike. According to a recent Unicast poll, 37% of consumers intend to participate in Free Shipping Day to avoid shipping fees and grab last-minute bargains.
Free Shipping Day is a one-day event when consumers can shop online from their favorite brands and receive free shipping with delivery by Christmas Eve. Launched in 2008, Free Shipping Day will this year feature a record 1500+ participating merchants.
"The response has exceeded even our own lofty expectations, but the enthusiasm makes sense," said Free Shipping Day founder Luke Knowles. "Shoppers love the convenience of shopping online, but are turned off by expensive shipping fees. On the merchant side, sales often plummet towards the middle of December with many folks concerned their gifts won't arrive in time for Christmas. Free Shipping Day alleviates both problems. It's really a win-win."
All Free Shipping Day offers will be revealed this Friday, December 17th on www.FreeShippingDay.com at 12:00am EST.
Showing posts with label Free Shipping Day. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Free Shipping Day. Show all posts
Merchants Launch an All-Out Free Shipping War
The free shipping holiday melee has turned into a raging war and consumers are destined to win. So far, the gunfire has been hot and heavy.
"The reason merchants are getting behind free shipping deals is no secret. A 2010 Accenture consumer holiday shopping survey showed free shipping is the biggest reason consumers continue to prefer shopping online. We created Free Shipping Day three years ago and was overwhelmed with the interest shown from consumers, merchants and national media. Now we know the opportunities are endless for both the public and merchants."
In an analysis of free shipping entitled "The Free Shipping eBook," Knowles noted this trend has been building for much longer than three years: "Amazon and Zappos several years ago demonstrated how effective a well-planned and well-executed free shipping campaign could be for increasing sales and market share, as well as creating positive buzz about their brands. Both of these merchants have replaced advertising with free shipping and gone on to dominate the online retail industry. We've also seen how small e-merchants have used free shipping to make inroads against large retailers. It's the only way some small retailers can compete."
As predicted in Knowles eBook, the big boys aren't the only ones shooting off their guns this holiday season. According to Shop.org's eHoliday Survey, four out of five online retailers will offer free shipping at some point during the holiday season, and nearly one-third said they began their 2010 offers earlier than a year ago.
- Last week, Walmart, pulled out the big guns by providing free shipping on more than 60,000 online items during the holidays, with no minimum order or subscription registration required. The offer extends through Dec. 20, with a heavy focus on electronics and toys. The move was a clear attempt to wrest market share from e-commerce leader Amazon. The founding father of free shipping deals is widely recognized for its Amazon Prime offer of free two-day delivery for an annual subscription fee of $79.
- Amazon sent a shot over Walmart's bow Thursday by saying it would meet or beat any free shipping deal out there. The matching offer applies to a limited selection of items.
- Up until recently, Best Buy had trumpeted free shipping on thousands of products. Wednesday, the electronics retailer said its offer is now valid on hundreds of thousands of items, including all CDs, Blue-Ray and DVD movies, gaming software and accessories. Strangely, such in-demand items as laptop computers, Apple iPads, iPods, netbooks and electric vehicles (?) are not included in the offer.
- Noticing Walmart's big push in their traditional territory, Toys "R" Us Monday began a free shipping offer on purchases of $49 or more for all items except video game consoles/handhelds, software, hardware and accessories.
"The reason merchants are getting behind free shipping deals is no secret. A 2010 Accenture consumer holiday shopping survey showed free shipping is the biggest reason consumers continue to prefer shopping online. We created Free Shipping Day three years ago and was overwhelmed with the interest shown from consumers, merchants and national media. Now we know the opportunities are endless for both the public and merchants."
In an analysis of free shipping entitled "The Free Shipping eBook," Knowles noted this trend has been building for much longer than three years: "Amazon and Zappos several years ago demonstrated how effective a well-planned and well-executed free shipping campaign could be for increasing sales and market share, as well as creating positive buzz about their brands. Both of these merchants have replaced advertising with free shipping and gone on to dominate the online retail industry. We've also seen how small e-merchants have used free shipping to make inroads against large retailers. It's the only way some small retailers can compete."
As predicted in Knowles eBook, the big boys aren't the only ones shooting off their guns this holiday season. According to Shop.org's eHoliday Survey, four out of five online retailers will offer free shipping at some point during the holiday season, and nearly one-third said they began their 2010 offers earlier than a year ago.
Related articles
- Wal-Mart ups the ante with free shipping offer (money.cnn.com)
- Wal-Mart's free shipping weighs on Amazon (financialpost.com)
- UPDATE 1-Amazon weighed down by rivals' free shipping, deals (reuters.com)
- Best Buy Offers Free Shipping This Holiday Season (eon.businesswire.com)
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