Amazon’s 2023 Prime Day events brought in a combined $13.88 billion in US ecommerce sales last year, according to our forecast. But as consumers remain cautious with their spending, Amazon is looking to boost sales outside of the July and October tentpole events.
The strategy: Amazon is adding several smaller sales events to its calendar, highlighting different categories and occasions to keep consumers spending.
So far this year, Amazon has hosted at least five separate sales events: the Big Spring Sale (March 20 to 25), Amazon Pet Day (May 7 to 8), Amazon Book Sale (May 15 to May 20), Amazon Summer Beauty Haul (May 13 to May 19), and Amazon’s Memorial Day sale (May 20 to 27).
The reasoning: With consumer spending still sluggish, Amazon is using deals and discounts to increase its sales share in an increasingly competitive market.
The results: Amazon hasn’t released any sales data from these events, but outside sources report the retailer’s Big Spring Sale boosted sales and Prime memberships.
The “theme” of the Big Spring Sale didn’t seem to have much impact on what consumers bought.
The bottom line: While it seems like Amazon could be overloading on sales events in the first half of the year, as long as consumers remain price-sensitive, it’s a smart strategy.
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