Tag Archive | "black friday 2008 ads"

Black Friday Sales Gains Higher Online Than in Stores


While Black Friday deals on laptops and HDTVs helped to lure shoppers to stores and online sites over the weekend, it’s still unclear whether sales of consumer electronics products really brought retailers much holiday cheer.

Across all product categories, including electronics, spending at stores and Web sites from Nov. 26 to no. 29 rose a scant 0.5 percent to $41.2 billion from the year before, according to the National Retail Federation (NRF).

The biggest sales gains seem to have sprung up online, particularly for consumer electronics products.

Shoppers lined up for hours in the wee hours of Friday morning at Wal-Mart stores in hopes of scoring a $198 e-Machine or $298 HP laptop before supplies ran out.

Meanwhile, though, Internet sales shot up 11 percent from a year ago to $595 million, according to Comscore. A total of five sites attracted for than four million visitors each, including tech-specific Best buy Sites and Apple.com Worldwide Sites along with Amazon, Wal-Mart, and Target.

At BestBuy’s brick-and-mortar stores, early morning shopping crowds were bigger this year than last year, said CEO Brian Dunn, in a Bloomberg TV interview.

But a check of Apple Stores suggested that Black Friday sales of Macs could actually show a year-over-year decline, according to Apple Insider.

With prices down on products ranging from flat panel TVs to clothing and toys, average spending per consumer — across both brick-and-mortar and online stores — dropped to $343.31 from a total of $372.57 a year ago, the NRF said.

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Online Retailers Get Jump On Cyber Monday With Big Black Friday Sales Gains


Traditionally, holiday shoppers invade stores the Friday after Thanksgiving, a day known as Black Friday, then hit the Internet to shop a few days later on what has come to be known as Cyber Monday.

So much for holiday traditions. Shoppers aren’t waiting for Cyber Monday to start their online shopping, judging by statistics issued by a number of market research sources over the weekend.

Holiday season retail e-commerce spending in the U.S. on Friday, Nov. 27, reached $595 million ” up 11 percent from $534 million the same day last year, according to Comscore, which tracks online activity. Altogether online holiday shopping for Nov. 1 through 27 was $10.6 billion, up 3 percent from $10.3 billion during the same period in 2008.

“Black Friday, better known as a shopping bonanza in brick-and-mortar retail stores, is increasingly becoming one of the landmark days in the online holiday shopping world,” said Comscore chairman Gian Fulgoni, in a statement.

“While this acceleration in spending suggests the online holiday season may be shaping up slightly more optimistically than anticipated, it may also reflect the heavy discounting and creative promotions being put forth by retailers that now encompass the use of social networks such as Facebook and Twitter,” Fulgoni said. “Cyber Monday ” the traditional kick-off to the online holiday shopping season ” and the subsequent weeks will be the real test for how online retailers fare this season.”

Experian Hitwise, another company that tracks the Internet and E-commerce, said Amazon.com was the top retail Web site visited on Black Friday, receiving 13.55 percent of all U.S. visits among the top 500 retail Web sites. Comscore said the number of unique visitors at Amazon.com was up 28 percent from Black Friday 2008.

Wal-Mart was the second most visited site on Black Friday with 11.18 percent of all visits, according to Experian Hitwise. Comscore said visits to the retail giant’s Website were up 22 percent over Black Friday 2008.

Other hot shopping sites on Black Friday included Apple.com (up 39 percent from last year, according to Comscore), Target.com, BestBuy.com, Staples.com and Dell.com.

Statistics for the results of Cyber Monday are expected as soon as Tuesday afternoon.

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Cyber Monday 2009 deals: Tiger Woods was rushing out for Black Friday deals on …


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November 28 — It must be clear by now, as a Boston Golf Examiner reader pointed out, that Tiger Woods was on his way to take advantage of pre-Cyber Monday deals when he cracked up his car on the morning of Black Friday.

  • Tiger Woods’ life has become a soap opera, as these photos illustrate

And now, since his wife, Elin Nordegren, smashed his SUV with one of his old clubs and likely damaged it beyond repair, the world’s greatest golfer must need a good deal on Nike irons and fairway metals — let alone a Cadillac Escalade — even more.

Yup. Mystery solved. no affair, no pissed-off wife, no domestic violence. just Tiger Woods looking to get a jump on all those Black Friday and Cyber Monday shoppers.

Or, perhaps, there’s a tad more to it. if so, you might want to catch up on all the rumors and innuendos about what really happened when Woods cracked his car into a fire hydrant early Friday morning at Tiger Woods’ injuries from wife not car accident.

Remember all the way back to Thursday when Tiger Woods was just the greatest golfer in the world? Take a walk down memory lane with this video of Woods’ greatest golf shots:

Tiger Woods’ greatest golf shots caught on video

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Wal-Mart's Black Friday Rip-off


TRACY, CA — Black Friday customers who arrived at the Wal-Mart store here, expecting to purchase an e-Machines laptop for the $198 Black Friday price, were surprised to find the entire shipment of 37 units had been assigned to other customers the day before.

A store manager admitted that the only way for a customer to know that tickets allowing later purchase of the machines were being distributed early would have been to call the store and ask.

Such tickets are used by other stores–such as Best Buy–but were not mentioned in Wal-Mart’s Black Friday advertising, which only said the laptops would be on sale from 5 a.m. until 10 a.m.

“That really sucks,” said one unhappy customer when he learned he could not purchase a laptop, despite at the store at 5 a.m. when the sale was supposed to start “How was I supposed to know to call?”

The Wal-Mart manager, named mark, said other tech products had been presold in the same way as well, but did not elaborate.

Still other products, supposedly available for the entire day, did not go on sale until 5 a.m., despite the store having been open since midnight.

Mark, the store manager, said the company changed its Black Friday strategy this year, following the death of a security guard, crushed by customers when a Long Island opened on Black Friday 2008. this year, the Los Angeles Times reported two minor incidents on at Wal-Mart stores on Friday.

“There are some things we need to refine,” the Tracy manager said when asked why someone who arrived at the advertised time–5 a.m.–was unable to purchase the advertised laptop. it appeared that customers who lined up inside the store as early as 3 a.m. had not been told the item would be unavailable.

It is unclear whether the early ticket distribution was done at Wal-Mart stores nationwide or only in limited areas. it appeared other computers, including a $298 HP model, were also presold.

Stocks of a $589 HP All-in-One desktop, $78 1TB external drives, and other computer items were not presold and becamse available at 5 a.m., as promised in the store’s advertising.

Unlike past years, the Tracy, California store had been open 24 hours on Thanksgiving, and early-arriving customers were allowed inside the store, where they clustered around the items they wished to purchase.

Most of the sale items were stacked on pallets and shrink-wrapped, with signs warning that the merchandise was not to be sold before 5 a.m. on Black Friday, Nov. 27.

It is not clear how widespread the early ticket distribution was, or what penalties Wal-Mart might face as a result of the misleading advertising.

David Coursey tweets as @techinciter and may be contacted through his Web site.

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Black Friday's got to be gold; that's green to savvy shoppers


But some are beginning to question how long the super-discounting can last. Independent retailers are already resisting the practice, and some predict that larger chains will be next.

“Friday you will see really good deals,” predicted Marshal Cohen, a retail analyst with the NPD Group. “But it’s going to be on limited supply. You’re not going to see the storewide sales like you did last year. the economy is a little bit better [than last year] and the fact is that retailers have inventories under control. Last year, it wasn’t a full recession until October, and by then it was too late.”

As you hit the stores this weekend, it will help to think like a retailer. and it will help to understand the what, the how and the why behind the sales you are seeing.

Most retailers shy away from talking about how they choose the items they put on sale. for Black Friday, most select their most steeply discounted items a year or more in advance.

They must negotiate deals with manufacturers that can generate the right quantity for the right price. it takes time to make those $3 home appliances (Target) and $59 Tom Tom GPS units (Walmart).

Because they are committing to a product so early, most chains stick with items that were hot buys the year before for adults, Cohen said. for children, they go with classics, especially for toys.

Target and Toys R Us, for instance, have been advertising popular board games for $5 or less already this month.

“We all know Barbie is going to be in the top 10 list,” he said. “We know that Hot Wheels are going to be on the top 10 list. We know video games are going to be on the top 10 list. It’s not that hard to predict what’s going to be a ‘wow’ item.”

Retailers have chosen the items that will appear in their Thanksgiving weekend sales circulars weeks in advance, because those must be printed early. recently, many have been advertising their Black Friday deals via Web sites and e-mail newsletters early to help generate interest.

The Internet has allowed flexibility for last-minute changes, said Dan de Grandpre, editor of dealnews.com , a Web site that tracks bargains. many retailers will now add sale items as they get closer to Black Friday.

“Last year, we saw a lot of items [advertised] online as opposed to in print because then they can add them later.”

Retailers strike deals with manufacturers to create products for Black Friday at low prices. the new models generally have fewer features or are lower in quality.

“New models pop up on Black Friday for the first time ever,” de Grandpre said. “You’ve never seen this model of Samsung TV. It’s either a doorbuster or definitely it’s in the Black Friday ad.”

For instance, flat screen TVs that are on sale on Black Friday will typically have a lower resolution and might have one port for external devices instead of the standard three or four, he said.

This year there are signs that manufacturers are feeling a squeeze — and that will benefit the consumer

“Typically in previous years, you’d see [the special cheaper models] targeted to one specific store,” de Grandpre said. “This year, Samsung introduced six different TVs and they have them for everybody. all of the sudden there’s all this room for price competition.”

There are a few deals each year on which the retailer may lose money, Cohen said. the deals on which the retailer is actually losing money are easy to spot, de Grandpre added. “Those are the ones where it’s limit three per store.”

Of course, the whole idea behind the super-discounted items is to get people through the door, and that alone is going to be worth a lot this year. Still, the discounting frenzy that has enveloped the retail industry over the past several years has had ramifications.

For small stores, it’s tough to keep up, especially when big guns like Walmart and Amazon get into pricing wars.

Nancy Olson said her Quail Ridge Books & Music in Raleigh has been offering more deals this year, selecting different areas of the store for a 20-percent-off sale each month. In October, sales of boxed cards tripled as a result.

For December, books on tape are on sale. Pricing things competitively helps refresh inventory quickly.

“We agonize over it,” she said. “We’re trying to pick out things that for one are very expensive, and those books on tape are. We’re turning over the inventory even though it’s a 20 percent sale. our margins are good enough that we make a little bit of money.”

Still, it is possible to discount too far. In general she discounts up to about 30 percent and then stops for the sake of her profit margin.

In July, when the last Harry Potter book was released, Olson matched the 40 percent discount of the big chains — which she regrets.

“We sold thousands of them,” she said. “We didn’t make any money.”

As the economy climbs out of this recession, the days of everything on sale at 50 percent, 60 percent or 70 percent off may not last.

“The smartest shopper is the shopper who only buys those really great deals,” Cohen said. “But 97 percent of consumers do not have the knowledge or the discipline to only buy those discounted items.”

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Apple Brings America's “Black Friday” to Australia


Among the many interesting shopping developments that happen across the US during the holiday season, one is “Black Friday”, the immediate Friday after Thanksgiving, which most retailers’ countrywide mark by dropping prices and offering various attractive sales offers. Apple is now bringing this tradition to Australia and is expected to hugely cut prices on its merchandise on the day.

Thanksgiving is generally considered the kick-off for Christmas shopping, with some of the most prominent retailers recording high sales within days of the marked day. it has been said that Black Friday is “a highlight of the American shopping calendar”.

Apple is all set to bring this day to its Australian customer base, and on 27 November, the Apple Australia Online Store and selected retail stores of the technology giant across the county will put items up for sale. Customers can also place their orders through telephone, on 133-622, on the discount day.

Keeping up with its mysterious style, Apple has not revealed a lot of juicy details on the offer, neither have the names of the discounted products been released; these remain to be seen and Apple enthusiasts are now waiting for the day of the sale.

To celebrate Christmas season, Apple has already announced free laser engraving and signature gift wrapping on any new iPod purchase, as well as the option to reserve a gift which can be priced up between 15 and 24 December.

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Dell Early Black Friday 2009 sales: PS3, Xbox 360, and Wii


Dell has already started its Early Bird sales in preparation for Black Friday 2009, with up to 40% off electronics and accessories. some of the deals that will be of interest to you will be on games consoles, more specifically the Xbox 360, Sony PS3 and the Nintendo Wii.

The first deal that we can see from Dell is on an Xbox 360 Elite Holiday Bundle. this bundle comes with two three games, Batman Lego and Pure. Dell are offering the bundle for just $269.99, an instant saving of $30, that is on top of free shipping.

The next early Black Friday 2009 deal is on the Uncharted: Drake’s Fortune PS3 Limited Edition Bundle. not only do you get that above game, but Resistance Fall of Man as well. The price is just $399.99; this includes a saving of $50.

One of the best deals has to be on The Beatles: Rock Band Wii Limited Edition Bundle. The price is just $224.99 following a $25 rebate.

These are just three of the deals on offer, Dell have many more great deals. for more details, visit dell.com. We recently informed you that Walmart has some great deals on consoles over Black Friday as well.

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