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Why Your Holiday Ads ROI Doesn’t Matter (Yet)

Why Your Holiday Ads ROI Doesn’t Matter (Yet)

Commerce Commerce, Data Strategy & Advisory, Media Strategy & Planning, Retail media, Seasonal marketing, eCommerce Platforms 3 min read
Profile picture for user Wyatt Burley

Written by
Wyatt Burley
Senior Advertising Manager

holiday-roi

Every ecommerce and retail advertiser knows the pressure placed on holiday ad campaigns. Budgets climb, expectations rise, and leadership starts asking one question: did we actually see a return?

Most brands look to return-on-ad-spend (ROAS) or advertising-cost-of-sales (ACoS) for the answer during their holiday ad flights. But those metrics often tell the wrong story for meaningful growth. Chasing a low ACoS or high ROAS in November might look like smart efficiency, yet it’s one of the fastest ways to hurt long-term performance.

The real ROI of Q4 shows up in Q1.

The real value of Q4 isn’t the short-term revenue spike but the audience and data foundation it builds for Q1 and beyond.

The purchase path data I’ve seen across brands reinforces this idea. Using five-year lookback windows from my clients’ Amazon Marketing Cloud (AMC) instances, the data consistently shows that Q4 shoppers often make another purchase within three months. These repeat purchases start meaningfully changing the unit economics of customer acquisition and strengthening organic visibility across product lines. This shows that strategic holiday spend can deliver returns long after the season ends.

When it’s time to defend your budget, position Q4 spend for what it is: a prepaid customer acquisition voucher for Q1, bought at a 50 percent discount. This framing eases CFO concerns about short-term efficiency when you have the data to show you are buying future Customer Lifetime Value (LTV) that outweighs the immediate cost. Effective brands measure beyond short-term revenue by tracking LTV, New-to-Brand (NTB) acquisition, and repeat purchase rate.

If you don’t have AMC, start by tracking NTB Purchase Share during Q4 and revisit those shoppers in Q1. Quantifying how many came back and bought more can demonstrate long-term value without a complex tech stack. 

But the groundwork for that ROI is laid earlier than you think.

Many brands still invest the majority of their ad dollars in an extremely short holiday window and hold their breath for marketing KPIs hour by hour throughout Cyber Week. However, there are two challenges with this.

First, ROAS and ACoS are shaped by two unpredictable variables that marketers do not have direct control over: cost-per-click (CPC) and conversion rate (CVR). When those shift drastically due to surges in shopping behavior (for example, we often see CVRs double in a matter of hours or days once deal periods begin around November 21), performance can look unstable even when it isn’t. If you react by lowering bids or cutting keywords that are performing, you’re playing a losing game of whack-a-mole and risk losing reach right when shoppers are ready to buy.

Second, the data shows that purchasing behavior is spread over a much wider window. Aligning spend with real shopper behavior makes every dollar work harder, and brands that stay active through this lead-in period capture the surge when shoppers move from browsing to purchasing. Brands should think of holiday in three phases with long bookends: late summer through early November builds awareness and consideration. Mid-November through Cyber Week drives conversion. Early to mid-December is for remarketing and retention, which trickles into that Q1 payoff mentioned before. Each phase compounds on the one before it. Instead of aiming for perfection in ad performance during a handful of days, focus on building momentum in the weeks and months preceding.

The payoff from investing early in generating demand dwarfs the effect of focusing so heavily on demand capture during Cyber Week, but requires time-sensitive shifts to your media planning. For example, video is one of the best ways to prime consumers earlier in the buying journey, but many DSPs and publishers of premium video placements (from Disney to Netflix, to Amazon) shift toward guaranteed buys during the holidays. Late planners or brands trying to react to in-flight micro trends during peak periods will be priced out of top placements. Securing them early gives you an edge competitors can’t match, and primes consumers for purchase of your products before the competition heats up.

Measure the health of Q1, not just the success of Q4.

When brands treat the holidays as an investment in future performance rather than a sales sprint, they start the new year ahead. The best-performing brands keep investing through the holidays and enter January with stronger visibility, more efficient ad spend, and shoppers who convert faster.

Watch your post-holiday data closely. Consistent traffic to product detail pages and steady organic conversion rates are signs that your strategy is working. These indicators show that visibility and intent built during Q4 are carrying into the new year.

The smartest brands see Q4 (and earlier) as the start of a new growth cycle, not the entire moment of payoff. Every dollar spent builds data, loyalty, and future revenue. That is how short-term spend becomes long-term strength, and how real ROI is earned.

If you want to refine your Amazon holiday planning or evaluate your Q4 to Q1 performance, connect with our team.

See how Amazon holiday advertising turns Q4 spend into long-term holiday ROI by driving new-to-brand growth, repeat buys, and stronger Q1 performance. Why Your Holiday Ads ROI Doesn’t Matter (Yet) See how Amazon holiday advertising turns Q4 spend into long-term holiday ROI by driving new-to-brand growth, repeat buys, and stronger Q1 performance. amazon holiday advertising holiday roi holiday advertising strategy holiday campaigns ecommerce strategy amazon ads amazon dsp amazon marketing cloud amc ROAS acos q4 success seasonal campaigns holiday marketing amazon advertising Commerce eCommerce Platforms Media Strategy & Planning Data Strategy & Advisory Retail media Seasonal marketing

This Black Friday, Influencers Are in Demand

This Black Friday, Influencers Are in Demand

Affiliate & Influencer Advertising Affiliate & Influencer Advertising, Influencer Marketing, Seasonal marketing, Social 3 min read
Profile picture for user Fernanda Silva

Written by
Fernanda Silva
Associate Director, Social Media

Collage of influencer filming in a selfie setup

Black Friday is a massive seasonal event known as the unofficial start of the holiday shopping season, with campaigns designed to offer significant discounts to attract as many customers as possible. And it’s only getting bigger: in 2022, Black Friday was the biggest day for in-store shopping within the United States with over 72.9 million consumers reached, gaining a 15% year-over-year increase.

Black Friday discounts are so irresistible to brands and consumers alike that the shopping holiday’s influence has extended beyond a one-day event into concepts such as Cyber Monday, Small Business Saturday and beyond. In fact, online offers that are promoted days after Black Friday, during Cyber Week, represent 16.7% of the entire season’s revenue, with $35.3 billion in sales in the U.S. The undeniable economic impact of influencers on Black Friday (and Cyber Week) transcends doubt and highlights their indispensable role in shaping the retail landscape.

But there are other ways Black Friday has evolved in recent years: the rise of influencer partnerships across seasonal campaigns, helping brands better connect with audiences and stand out amidst competition. As brands plan their communication and sales strategies for this year’s Black Friday and beyond, it’s not too late to tap into the help of digital creators and their communities—here’s how and why you should add them to your marketing wish list.

Creators’ influence continues to grow.

Today, it isn’t unusual to see an influencer representing a brand by either acting as its spokesperson or simply creating stories about a product. Influencer marketing strategies have become increasingly essential and indisputable for the marketing ambitions of large, medium and small brands.

Marketing professionals understand that to reach new audiences and build loyalty, producing content about the features of a product or service alone is no longer sufficient to retain or win new customers. Instead, partnering with influencers bridges the gap between the brand and the audience by delivering social media engagement, loyalty and connection. By developing a close and authentic relationship with their community, influencers can provide honest recommendations and reviews of products and services. Such relations become imperative for Black Friday campaigns, where the focus is on finding the best deals among inbox and in-feed clutter.

Indeed, Black Friday makes the competition for attention fiercer as brands compete for reaching budget-strapped customers. “Black Friday and the holidays are undoubtedly one of the busiest times of year for both influencers and influencer agencies alike, with brands committing high percentages of their yearly budgets to drive consumers to shop their sales,” says Celine Sidani, Account Supervisor, Influencer Marketing. “With participating brands and holiday budgets growing higher and higher each year, it is more important than ever for brands to devise influencer strategies and creative narratives that will stand out in an oversaturated market and truly drive audiences to purchase.”

Influencers boost sales and relevance in the following ways:

  • Increased visibility of promotions: The influencer’s community is a lever for the brand to genuinely connect with new audiences.
  • Product recommendations and reviews: Reviews and unboxings are content categories highly sought after by consumers hoping to gain honest product recommendations. 37% of consumers trust social media influencers over brands, validating the persuasive power of digital creators.
  • Development of personalized campaigns: With a diverse range of influencers excelling in various categories such as sports, beauty, entertainment, etc., brands can partner with them to create social media campaigns that target specific audiences.
  • Humanization of the brand: Creating an authentic narrative allows consumers to better understand the benefits of the product or service and promotes a genuine connection with the brand’s community.

Get started planning an influencer campaign this holiday season.

Planning campaigns in advance helps marketing professionals avoid unnecessary or unforeseen costs, and working with influencers is no different. The first step is to analyze which influencers will be a part of the campaign depending on your defined goals and the measurement of influencer reach, social media engagement, traffic or conversions.

After this initial stage of goal and objective setting, begin selecting your creators of choice. It’s essential to check their history to ensure they have not been involved in controversies. Most importantly, the influencer should resonate with the brand’s audience to ensure a consistent tone of communication.

Once the influencers are selected, begin briefing and scripting the creative in partnership with them. A co-created effort with content creators brings more authenticity to the final product and makes it more organic to the relevant social platforms.

Put influencer Black Friday campaigns on your holiday wish list.

Brands recognize that using influencers in their marketing strategies amplifies results. As influencers become brands in their own right, they’ll only become even more formidable partners for brands who want to bridge the gap with end consumers. So, if you're a brand looking to make a big impact this Black Friday—or beyond—consider the power of influencers to help kick off the holiday shopping season on good footing. By collaborating with the right influencers, you can create a buzz, drive traffic to your store or website and ultimately achieve your sales goals.

Brands rely on Black Friday to kick off the holiday shopping season on the right foot—and influencer marketing is playing an increasingly pivotal role. influencer marketing holiday campaigns Influencers Social Influencer Marketing Affiliate & Influencer Advertising Seasonal marketing

5 Amazon Seller Tips for the Holidays

5 Amazon Seller Tips for the Holidays

Media Media, Media Strategy & Planning, New paths to growth, Seasonal marketing 6 min read
Profile picture for user Performance.Monks

Written by
Performance.Monks

Amazon boxes on a black table

The holidays are fast approaching, with deals already spiking as Amazon kicked off the season with the Prime Early Access Sale. Many experts anticipate that Q4 2022 will be the most lucrative yet, and it’s just getting started.

That said, economic uncertainty has prompted shoppers to search for the best deals and product value ahead of Black Friday, making the preparation window for sellers much shorter than in previous years. What’s more, Salesforce anticipates that 51% of consumers will purchase fewer holiday gifts this time around.

To help you reach consumers when they are ready to buy and make the most of this season, we built a list of tips that will get every aspect of your ecommerce business up to speed. With excess inventory, inflationary pressures and other unprecedented events, it’s vital to give your Amazon seller strategy the final tweaks it needs to positively impact your sales in Q4. Here’s what you need to know.

Consider these key seller dates.

According to Amazon, these are some of the main dates and events to prepare for. Be sure to mark your calendar so that you don’t miss any opportunities.

  • August 3rd - Holiday promotion submissions open in Vendor Central and Seller Central.
  • September 17th - Deadline to submit 7-day deals, Best Deals, and Lightning Deals.
  • October 21st to November 17th - Inbound shipping cutoff for vendors: Deal inventory must be in transit.
  • October 24th to November 17th - FBA inventory cut-off date for sellers: Shipments should arrive well before the key shopping dates for the holiday season. Inventory should arrive at fulfillment centers by this date.
A roadmap showing tips to the best advertising on amazon for the holidays

Set relevant goals.

Once you’ve marked the critical Amazon holiday deadlines on your calendar, start preparing the required elements and thinking about budget allocation across this prolonged season. Amazon advertising and promotion budgets should be specifically planned around these peak dates. 

As you start campaign planning, it’s important to set realistic expectations and key performance indicators that you can regularly keep track of on your data dashboard. If you’re uncertain what those should be, consider building out KPIs for each one of the steps outlined here, and keep in mind that your numbers may differ from other seasons. Audiences are often subject to change during the holidays, which is why our experts recommend determining your audience pre-holiday season to better plan your campaigns and initiatives.

A good step is to leverage past sales data (including Prime Day) to inform your strategy and goal-setting for this year. This will also help when it comes to inventory planning.



Become retail ready.

As we always say, advertising drives the most highly-qualified traffic, and retail readiness drives conversion. But what does it mean to be retail-ready? 

1. Inventory management

First, ensure you have an inventory plan in place. The sooner you can determine which products you plan on selling and guarantee you're not facing any inventory issues such as spoilage, deadstock, or low or high inventory levels, the sooner you can plan your other business elements. A fundamental part of managing inventory is reviewing your past sales to forecast this year's. Analyze your products' historical data, their performance during Prime Day, and which of your items (and your competitors’) could skyrocket during the holidays.

The next step is to ship your inventory to Amazon fulfillment centers before November 2 for Black Friday and December 1 for Christmas. With shipping and inventory in place, you can move on to advertising strategies, promotions, product detail pages and catalogs according to the products you have in stock.

2. Optimized content on Amazon

Product detail pages are vital for driving conversions and building trust with your customers, so spend time optimizing your pages' critical elements, then split-testing your work. We recommend starting with your product detail pages and A+ content. Ideally, this should begin as early as possible as A+ content takes the longest to build out. We encourage sellers to start preparing their creative in September.

If you’re not sure whether you need to update your A+ content, ask yourself: are we using comparison charts? Are we using all five modules? What about Brand Story? If the answer is no, it’s probably a good time to take another look at your content. What’s more, you can take the opportunity to refresh your current images and add holiday themes and festive overlays. Your images should sell the product on their own. Once creative is produced, add it to the platform to ensure Amazon approves it in advance.

Brand Stores should also be tailored for the holiday season. One strategy for your Brand Store is to create "store versions," where you can duplicate a page in your store, update the images, videos, or layout and schedule that version to run during a predesignated period. Store versions are helpful for quick updates that you wouldn't want to carry over into the new year or past a specific peak season. Another strategy is adding a Holiday Favorites page and running Sponsored Brand Ads. These should be done at least a month in advance. 

Our tip for optimizing copy is to review your top ASINs ahead of time to determine the top sellers and ensure they have robust titles, bullets, and descriptions. Be careful when adding keywords like "gift" or "present" in your listings during the holiday season, as it goes against Amazon policies. Instead, be strategic in how you are updating your listing copy and backend terms, determine what highly qualified keywords competitors are using and aim to be informative to your target customer.

3. Keyword Research

The months leading into Q4 and the holiday season are great times to conduct keyword research, update your current list and search for holiday-centric keywords to evaluate every opportunity.

Develop a competitive promotional strategy.

We can’t depend on consumers searching across e-retails, we need to stand out among the competition with an attractive promotional strategy. Some of the Amazon promotions that can come in handy during this long holiday season are:

1. Amazon Coupons (run time of up to 90 days)

Flexible and low-cost, these are great for driving velocity and increasing sales.

2. Best Deal/7-Day Deals (run time of up to two weeks for Vendors and one week for Sellers)

These are brand awareness tools that are better suited for well-established brands on the platform. The discount minimums are high, and merchandising fees are required.

3. Lightning Deals (run time of up to 12 hours)

Similar to above, these are high-cost brand awareness tools. They also have rigid approval policies and, even if approved, they are not guaranteed to run. Longer run times allow for more traffic to be driven to detail pages.

4. Promo Codes (run time of up to 120 days)

Great for brands with a strong social media presence or marketing campaigns. These can attract customers to buy on the channel and capture new purchases. Promo codes are the best option for specific targeting and having more control over the audience you reach.

It’s important to keep in mind that deals have a submission deadline. This year, it fell on September 17th for Black Friday and Cyber Monday. Also, review run times to better plan out your season’s promotional strategy.

Consider these Amazon Advertising best practices.

Once you have everything in place to be retail-ready, Amazon Advertising is necessary to unlock growth over the holiday season. It will not only help with competitive visibility; it can also improve organic rank and drive incremental sales when done correctly.

Considering the budgets you have determined in your goal-setting phase, you should start building your advertising campaigns based on your objectives. If you are a new seller with a new product, we recommend you begin your advertising efforts as soon as possible. Three months is the minimum to gather data and gain relevance within the algorithm. 

For sellers with existing products, give yourself at least a month in advance to begin new campaigns or refresh your current ones. Your products have triggered the flywheel or rank organically, so they will have an easier time staying relevant during the holiday season. Build awareness in advance through high-volume seasonal search terms—leading up to higher-converting campaigns to retarget and capture those early visitors when they are ready to buy.

Last but not least, examine your data and metrics regularly to ensure your holiday advertising strategy is as optimized as possible throughout the season. 

Recap the peak season.

The work you or your agency have to do on Amazon doesn’t end after the holidays. It’s fundamental to look back at your wins and losses over the last couple of months to guide your 2023 planning and continue to drive visibility on the platform.

Some ways to recap the season include:

  • Reviewing analytics to measure your successes (or failures) and your competitors’.
  • Paying attention to customer feedback through reviews, cancellations and returns.
  • Applying learnings to your New Year planning.
  • Refreshing your keyword lists, ads and content to remove seasonal copies and imagery.

All in all, it’s never too late to set your business up for success. While the task may seem daunting, spending your time and effort on a brief list of products that move the needle is what will pay off. Follow these steps, make relevant optimizations and results will follow.

Learn more information about our Amazon Services.

To help you reach consumers when they are ready to buy and make the most of this season, we built a list of tips that will get your ecommerce business up to speed. ecommerce amazon holiday marketing holiday campaigns amazon advertising ecommerce strategy Media Media Strategy & Planning Seasonal marketing New paths to growth

Are Tech-Focused Holiday Campaigns Naughty, or Nice?

Are Tech-Focused Holiday Campaigns Naughty, or Nice?

4 min read
Profile picture for user mediamonks

Written by
Monks

The thought of elves packing gifts in an automatized fulfillment center doesn’t conjure the same cheerful image as Santa’s workshop. But when used creatively, technology can make miracles happen just in time for the holidays.

Rich in tradition, ritual and nostalgia, it may seem as though cutting-edge technology doesn’t lend well to the holiday season. But technology—which can include anything from the digital platforms we use each day to more cutting-edge experiences—is the closest thing we have to magic. “I think Christmas campaigns try to steer clear of technology,” says Andy Hopkinson, Lead Producer at MediaMonks. “But there’s really nice ways that technology can make the things we do all the time quite fun.” Brands who don’t shy away from tech can realize imaginative campaigns that bring holiday magic to life.

Modernize Tradition

For holiday campaigns, each tradition or symbol becomes opportunity to modernize and add a creative twist. Take letter writing, for example. It’s a yearly tradition for kids to write letters to Santa, detailing their both their good behavior and the gifts they hope to receive.

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If any brand has embraced this tradition with gusto and style, it’s Macy’s: the retailer has supported the tradition for years to benefit the Make-A-Wish foundation. Three years ago they upgraded the ritual by asking kids to trade in their paper and pens for an iPad and magical stylus. The Wish Writer pen and its accompanying app—made by JWT New York in collaboration with MediaMonks—allows kids to write digital letters in animated “magic ink.” If they need inspiration for what to say, the app provides several activities that reinforce good behavior, which kids can mention when they Santa if they made the naughty or nice list. The fact that children can write to Santa through a visually exciting digital platform—mirroring how they communicate with friends intuitively—adds a sense of immersion and realism to the campaign.

Digitally Deliver Holiday Cheer

Today’s platforms strive to connect people, so why not use them to deliver holiday cheer in ways that extend beyond a simple social post or hashtag? Just like the Wish Writer example above, supporting native user behavior on popular, everyday platforms can help add a sense of identification or realism. Perhaps one of the most trusted apps for orienting one’s place in the world is Google Maps, so when Google tracks Santa’s activity through the app each year, even Scrooges may have a tough time claiming the jolly holiday mascot isn’t real.

One great starting point for designing an interactive holiday campaign is to consider how everyday platforms can enhance it. When Snapchat unveiled its lens studio, we delivered the holiday cheer straight to users’ phones through a festive world lens. The “world lens,” or small AR model users can place within their surroundings, features well-known Snapchat characters and mascots appropriately dressed for the season on a bank of snow. It’s a bit like putting yourself in a snow globe with the mascots that are brought to life, which you can then share with friends. Because it’s rendered in a communications platform, one can imagine plenty more opportunities for such technology to bring people together—which is what the holidays are all about.

One great starting point for designing an interactive holiday campaign is to consider how everyday platforms can enhance it. When Snapchat unveiled its lens studio, we delivered the holiday cheer straight to users’ phones through a festive world lens. The “world lens,” or small AR model users can place within their surroundings, features well-known Snapchat characters and mascots appropriately dressed for the season on a bank of snow. It’s a bit like putting yourself in a snow globe with the mascots that are brought to life, which you can then share with friends. Because it’s rendered in a communications platform, one can imagine plenty more opportunities for such technology to bring people together—which is what the holidays are all about.

Make Miracles Happen

If seeing is believing, then technology can really make holiday dreams come true for your audience—even if they’re not human. Noticing that dogs might feel left out of the holiday festivities by their bipedal family members, gourmet dogfood brand Cesar felt they should be put in charge of a time-honored holiday tradition: designing Christmas sweaters. Fashion design is a bit difficult when you have paws, so Cesar needed a design studio that would help the dogs realize their creative potential to the delight of their masters.

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This resulted in a highly advanced yet whimsical scientific lab that’s part Willy Wonka factory, part Santa’s workshop and part scene from The Jetsons. Divided into stations that translate dogs’ everyday actions into design elements, the lab uses imaginative technology that’s also reminiscent of a dog show. “We had to find really simple things that dogs can do that would translate to the design process” said Hopkinson. “How could we make those simple things more fun to watch?” While the dogs are the stars, the technology really does have a presence in the film—it’s tough to determine whether the dogs or the robot are cuter—but thanks to a dynamic, fun design and stylish Christmas elements, the lab never feels sterile.

This is because while the inspiration of the studio was a science lab, vibrant colors and dynamic shapes were used to evoke the sense of fun you’d find in a playground. Instant visual feedback was also baked into the design so the technological aspect would remain fun and not abstract.

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“The key thing Cesar wanted us to do is make everything real,” said Hopkinson, highlighting how Cesar’s doggy design studio isn’t just movie magic. In fact, skeptical viewers can watch it all come to life in a behind-the-scenes video augmenting the campaign. “It’s really interesting to see how this came about in reality rather than just the final product. You can see how this stuff truly worked.”

Using tech within your holiday campaigns is all about making the impossible possible and translating imagination to reality. By providing more immersive experiences through tech, you go a long way in impressing your audience and making their holiday wishes come true.

With the holiday season steeped in tradition, a focus on tech might not be the most obvious choice for designing interactive digital marketing campaigns. But technology can provide a creative spin that brings holiday magic to life. Are Tech-Focused Holiday Campaigns Naughty, or Nice? Despite the holiday season’s focus on tradition and nostalgia, cutting-edge tech in holiday campaigns can make miracles happen.
holiday campaigns digital marketing holiday digital marketing campaign Christmas campaign holiday marketing strategies technology campaign ideas

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