What’s different about the holidays this year? If you’re a marketer, you need to know how your target consumers have changed their needs, wants and shopping habits before you can truly craft your best seasonal strategy. You also had better keep an eye on what your competitors are doing differently.
At the company I work for, Salsify, we analyze aggregate retail search activity, and we’ve discovered it grows more widely distributed during the shopping period leading up to the holidays. We’ve recently conducted research (registration required) on the keywords that shoppers use around the holidays and we’ve identified important opportunities for brands to expand their keyword lists. Leading brands are also dramatically boosting the pace of their product content updates to capitalize on the opportunity throughout the season to win market share.
Let’s run through the top three takeaways from our study:
1. The 2016 holiday season drove a 30 percent increase in the number of top retail search terms — those in the 90th percentile or above in terms of search frequency.
Consumers aren’t just searching more during the holiday season; they are also searching across a much wider variety of terms. An analysis of all retail searches run across several of our company’s retail partners between January and December 2016 showed that the universe of “popular search queries” expands considerably in November and December.
What this means for brands is pretty evident: You need to be responsive to this change in behavior. Just to be found, let alone bought by your target customers, your product content on Amazon, Walmart and other channels needs to reflect relevant, holiday-oriented terms as the season gets under way.
If your product fits the description of a “stocking stuffer” or a “great gift for kids,” for example, it’s vital that you add in language during the month of October or early November — just as consumers are switching into gift-buying mode.
2. Seventy-six percent more product detail page content updates were pushed during an average holiday month versus an average non-holiday month.
Brands are indeed taking a substantially more active role in their product content leading into the holiday season.
We examined six full months of product content pushes and updates across more than 50 large retailers in the apparel, toys, home and garden and associated industries (all of them were our company’s customers). Collectively, the brands included in this sample oversee the management of more than 10 million SKUs.
Across this same-advertiser set, an average holiday season month in 2016 had 76 percent more product content pushes occurring across retailer sites as compared to the prior six-month average. These numbers reverted back to non-holiday levels in January and February.
There’s a reason for this, and it’s the same reason more and more online retailers are investing in APIs and direct connections with brands. Consistently updated and relevant product content has a meaningful impact on sales.
[Read the full article on Marketing Land.]
The post 3 behavioral stats for retailers to supercharge your holiday strategy appeared first on Search Engine Land.
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