
Each year we read that consumers are waiting later and later to
complete their Christmas shopping. But marketers are apparently not
waiting 'til the last minute to send their catalogues. In December we
received just 62 catalogues, the lowest volume of any month in 2009
except April. (And I’m sure that the scant 40 catalogues we tallied in
April was some sort of aberration. Gremlins must have swiped the bulk
of our post that month so that they could order more spanners to throw
into works.) By way of comparison, in November we received more than twice as many catalogues—140.
Half
of the December catalogues made no mention of special offers on their
covers or in their covering letters. This is a statistically
insignificant increase from the 49.3 percent of November’s catalogues.
What’s more the percentage of free delivery and gift-with-purchase
offers declined. Whereas 19.3 percent of the November catalogues
advertised free P&P, just 12.9 percent of the December catalogues
did. Likewise, 14.3 percent of the November catalogues touted a free
gift, compared with 6.5 percent in December.
These numbers might
lead you to believe that fewer marketers felt the need to reduce their
margins in order to gain sales from procrastinating Christmas shoppers.
But the percentage of catalogues offering sales and discounts refute
this: 37.1 percent of the December books boasted of discounts and
similar offers, up from 31.4 percent in November.
Only five of
the 62 catalogues prominently displayed their order deadlines for
Christmas delivery. Maybe that was because most of the cataloguers
didn’t have particularly user-friendly deadlines. Knitwear mailer Wolsey,
for instance, gave noon, 16th December as its cut-off date—not much of
a help for last-minute shoppers. Discount fashion mailer M and M Direct had the latest deadline: midday on 22nd December.
Conversely, Argos targeted early birds with its Furniture Sale insert, which let customers know that the sale began on Christmas day.
Now, as a treat for the wonks amongst you, a few year-end statistics. In total, Catalogue e-business
logged in 1,476 catalogues in 2009. September was the month with the
greatest volume, a back-breaking (for the posties) 212 catalogues.
May
saw the highest percentage of catalogues with prominent sale or
discount offers, 43.7 percent. The March books, meanwhile, were the
least likely to boast of discounts and price cuts, with just 28.1
percent doing so. For all of 2009, 523 catalogues, or 35.4 percent,
made a point of promoting discounts and sales.
Free delivery was
most popular in October, with 21.7 percent of the catalogues offering
it, and least popular in February, when only 7.3 percent offered it.
For the entire year, 219 catalogues, or 14.8 percent, offered
conditional or nonconditional free P&P.
Slightly less
popular as a promotion was the gift with purchase. All told, 191 of the
catalogues received last year, or 12.9 percent, offered it. June was
the most popular month for free gifts, when 17.8 percent offered
them.
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