Retail and consumers

Winners and losers of Black Friday 2023


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Inflation has been a persistent challenge for retailers this year by creating cautious consumers. For weeks ahead of Black Friday, retailers have been encouraging consumers to spend on what is typically considered the busiest and most important day of the year for the industry.

“Retailers are seeing customers across the spectrum become more choiceful and discerning, which includes buying closer-to-need,” TD Cowen analysts led by Oliver Chen said in an emailed note regarding Black Friday.

In response to consumer reticence, retailers seemed to begin promoting their holiday shopping deals earlier than usual, with many major companies offering their deals over a month ahead of Black Friday.

Consumers spent a record $9.8 billion online on Black Friday, according to data from Adobe Analytics. That’s up 7.5% from last year.

But even with record online spend, TD Cowen lowered its guidance for the season, now expecting holiday spend to be up 2% to 3%. Previously, the organization forecast an increase of 4% to 5%, while the National Retail Federation estimated holiday spend would be up between 3% to 4% year over year.

With life largely back to normal for most since the early days of the COVID-19 pandemic, as of publication time, only a few issues had emerged. Early Friday morning, American Dream, one of the largest malls in the U.S., was briefly evacuated for a bomb threat. Operations at the New Jersey mall returned to normal following a law enforcement investigation, which determined there was no imminent threat, Gov. Phil Murphy said in a social media post. Mall representatives did not immediately respond to Retail Dive’s request for comment about the situation.

And some also chose Black Friday and major shopping destinations to make a statement about geopolitical events. Crowds gathered at shopping centers in several major U.S. cities to protest the Israel-Hamas War.

For retailers that didn’t see the performance or engagement they expected, there are likely plenty of good days ahead before the holiday season wraps up, according to Michael Brown, partner and Americas Retail Leader at Kearney.

“Never underestimate the consumer,” Brown said. “They’ve been very resilient. They will shop. They have obligations to family and other loved ones that they’re going to fulfill the gift list for. If not now, it will get busy out there — be ready, they’ll be coming.”

Here’s a look at some of what’s happened so far during one of the industry’s most important days of the year.

Winners

Mobile and online

For the first time, mobile shopping is expected to overtake desktop buying this holiday season, according to Adobe Analytics. More than half of spend online (51.2%) will be on mobile devices.

Adobe Analytics also found that smartphones accounted for $5.3 billion of all online sales on Black Friday, up 10.4% year over year. Smartphones also accounted for 54% of online sales. One reason is that improved shopping experiences make it easier to make purchases on mobile devices.

After a pandemic-era slide, shoppers surged back to buying on mobile, delivering an all-time high for that segment, according to data from Salesforce. In 2017, mobile represented 61% of digital traffic. That grew to 75% in 2020 and to 79% this year.

“We see the mobile phone being the bridge that connects online and in-store shopping,” Rob Garf, vice president and general manager of retail at Salesforce, told Retail Dive in an interview Friday.

“The days of getting to a store at five in the morning to take advantage of doorbusters are largely over,” Garf said. “Retailers are trying to emulate that urgency online by creating online doorbusters and some even provided perks to their loyalty members to allow early access to deals. So there is less of an urgency and an importance put on the store via Black Friday.” 

For Cyber Week — the five days from Thanksgiving to Cyber Monday — Adobe expects $37.2 billion in online spending, up 5.4% from last year. That represents a nearly 17% share of the full holiday season. 





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