Seasonal Planning is great for aligning internal stakeholders and giving your internal (and external) creative partners time to do what they do best. But let’s not overlook the real fruit of all of that labor: creating external events that get customers excited to shop!
As spring rolled in this year—warmer days, cherry blossoms, finally that first 70-degree day!—so did the seasonal and retail events at major retailers around the country. We wanted to see who did what and to cherry pick some key takeaways that can help you with your seasonal planning efforts.
Take a stroll down the aisles and through the landing pages with us…
DSW: Nails it (!!)
If you popped into DSW on your lunch break in April looking for a little distraction, a break from the norm, a chance to get away from the sheer madness of it all (I mean, theoretically), you were greeted with the essence of what Seasonal Planning delivers: excitement.
Maybe it’s the bold orange background. The clear but purposeful “Mega Sale” type. Or the friendly, slightly manic (!!) treatment. DSW’s sale event definitely put a lot of pep in our step.
In-store, discounted shoes (apparently the “Lowest. Prices. Ever.” for select brands) were clearly grouped—signed—made special. The energy carried through to DSW’s social media and website. Clear, engaging, purposeful… Perfect.
Key Takeaways:
Target: A garden stroll
Target has historically been a master at Seasonal Planning, developing seasonal events and product assortments with an efficiency and ease that’s enviable. Target could rest on its laurels… It only takes one 70-degree day to stoke the desire to stock up on short-sleeve tees and, okay, maybe another bright beach towel. But Target still wrapped its seasonal offerings in a beautiful bow, from apparel to outdoor and everything in between.
This year, a floral cutout motif welcomed you as you entered and followed you around throughout most departments, in different colorways. Target run or garden stroll? Who can tell the difference? And, for that, we love them.
Key Takeaways:
IKEA: It’s not all sunny…
In-store at the Atlanta location, it was very clear that IKEA had a “Spring Sale” going on, March 15 through May 29. Signage dotted the aisles at almost every turn. Such a long event must have surely been stocked with tons of deals, offers, and values, right? It was… unclear. We saw more generic “Spring Sale” signage than we saw actual items discounted… but maybe it was a lighter week when we were there?
It was a promising but ho-hum experience in the store, and things actually took a turn for the worse on IKEA’s digital channels.
On IKEA’s Instagram and website home page, the Spring Sale was hardly mentioned, besides a similar stripe treatment (in green, for Earth Day). The green stripe made a brief appearance on the Offers page, too, along with a mention of Spring Sale (finally!) very low on the page that just linked… back to the same Offers page we were already on. Confusing!
Key Takeaways:
Get in touch!
From a brand-level promotion that could technically happen any time of the year to a spring-themed assortment that’s meant to help customers dream of carefree days outdoors, we believe you can take your retail or seasonal event wherever it needs to go. Just plan accordingly (Seasonal Planning—again!), so everything a customer sees adds to their experience (DSW, Target) and doesn’t leave them out in the cold (IKEA).
If you’d like to know more about our approach to Seasonal Planning, reach out! We’d love to tell you more.
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Kreber Has The Expertise You Need
With more than 100 years of experience, we’ve built a reputation for our hard work and dedication to driving positive outcomes for retail and B2B clients. As an independent marketing agency with a history of thinking ahead, we help you connect with customers, from print and digital marketing to social media content and everything in between.