With Black Friday and Cyber Monday sales behind us, it’s now time to turn our focus to finishing the year strong.
Believe it or not, there is a way to get solid sales in December without a massive effort. All while keeping your sanity.
Here’s the trick. Get people back to your site, and do it quickly, while they’re still looking for gifts.
I’m talking about Returning Visitors. Returning Visitors are twice as valuable as New Visitors.
Think of it this way, New Visitors are the lifeblood of our business for growth.
Returning Visitors are the lifeblood of our business for conversion (sales!).
You can see by my results below. Compare the Conversion Rate for New Visitors, to the Conversion rate for Returning Visitors
And so, when December rolls around, and people are already buying, this is the time to double down on your efforts to get more Returning Visitors.
Let’s talk about how you do it, check out this video:
Here’s a snapshot of the playbook:
1.To attract your Returning Visitors, use urgency as your hook. It’s your friend. What’s the last day you are shipping for a pre-Christmas delivery. Start talking about it everywhere, on Social Media, in Email, and in Text campaigns.
2. I want you to focus only on a few best selling items. This is not the time to be talking about all the things. Because people need clarity. Repetition brings clarity.
3. If you spend money on ads, shift a bigger portion of your budget to your warmest audiences:
- Website Visitors
- Email list
- Engaged on FB
- Engaged on IG
I want to caution you, recency is a big factor in conversion. So a 30 day audience is perfect. That said, if you have small warm audiences, you’ll need to use up to 180 days.
If you’ve had success with Google Shopping in the past, this is a great time to make sure you’ve got it running, and maybe even up the budget. Google Shopping is search based, and includes retargeting.
4. Use Email and SMS Marketing. Decide how many products you can feature. Give each product at least five days. For example, if you send a single product email, make sure you use a large and clean image of the product. Then use the ‘just in time for Christmas’ delivery hook, highlighting the last day to ship. Adding in a testimonial to demonstrate product benefit is also extremely valuable.
Example of a subject lines:
- 10 days left. Grab the socks that they’ll celebrate all year round. (our shipping deadline is Dec 15th)
- Ditch the stress, we’ll deliver the perfect gift for you (get your order in this week)
Send Day 1 – to your list.
Send Day 2- different subject line, but to non-openers
Send Day 5 – people who opened, but did not buy.
Then start again with Day 1.
5. Social media posting with links or shopping enabled is free!
Last thing:
Don’t stop, just change the conversation. There are still lots of shoppers in December, use your strategy all the way through.
Implement all of this, and you will see your Returning Visitor climb and you’ll feel confident that you’re spending your time and money wisely.
Great strategy to use year round!
If you have questions, comment below and ask me!
So, here’s what I need you to do next.
First, sign up to get updates in your inbox:
Then, be sure to Like and Follow my page on Facebook. I’ll be posting regular updates there!
That’s it! It will be a fun adventure, all the way from 0 to $50K on Shopify!
Related Posts
How Rebecca found her best source of sales (you can do this too)
Meet Rebecca, our Inner Circle Member from Australia. She’s this month’s 15-minute Feedback celebrity guest! Rebecca applied for 15-minute Feedback because she’s been driving traffic to her site, Traffic Bootcamp style, for a few months. And she feels a little stuck....
Want to Double Your Web Traffic?
Our Inner Circle Member, Kelly, has a cool little Shopify store called ShopRollick.com She’s doing a lot of things right. Her site looks great, she knows her numbers, and she has a small but mighty base of loyal customers. But here’s the thing: Her sales are about...
How Renee got 5x more clicks with some easy changes
Sometimes as shop owners, we get too close to our product and forget what we're selling. We get lost in the weeds and start highlighting product features that are obvious or insignificant to the consumer. It usually becomes something that doesn't stand out or...