<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" ?><!-- generator=Zoho Sites --><rss version="2.0" xmlns:atom="http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom" xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/"><channel><atom:link href="https://www.allencraftsllc.com/blogs/tag/retail/feed" rel="self" type="application/rss+xml"/><title>allencraftsllc.com - Blog #retail</title><description>allencraftsllc.com - Blog #retail</description><link>https://www.allencraftsllc.com/blogs/tag/retail</link><lastBuildDate>Wed, 13 May 2026 06:12:16 -0700</lastBuildDate><generator>http://zoho.com/sites/</generator><item><title><![CDATA[Black Friday, Diluted]]></title><link>https://www.allencraftsllc.com/blogs/post/black-friday-diluted</link><description><![CDATA[<img align="left" hspace="5" src="https://www.allencraftsllc.com/blk friday.png"/>Black Friday once worked because it was rare and clear. By stretching it into weeks, months, and endless “special” events, retailers diluted its meaning. What once created urgency now feels like noise, proving that when everything is promoted as exceptional, nothing feels that way.]]></description><content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class="zpcontent-container blogpost-container "><div data-element-id="elm_mLdCLP2rQli9ZQ4XxVFibA" data-element-type="section" class="zpsection "><style type="text/css"></style><div class="zpcontainer-fluid zpcontainer"><div data-element-id="elm_fuIzBHOoRguLMsdRhaCPDA" data-element-type="row" class="zprow zprow-container zpalign-items- zpjustify-content- " data-equal-column=""><style type="text/css"></style><div data-element-id="elm_B2SEOJ6kRceFKxbpLjejjg" data-element-type="column" class="zpelem-col zpcol-12 zpcol-md-12 zpcol-sm-12 zpalign-self- "><style type="text/css"></style><div data-element-id="elm_aTqxEGtrQ7GRrizZ51D2Og" data-element-type="heading" class="zpelement zpelem-heading "><style></style><h2
 class="zpheading zpheading-align-center zpheading-align-mobile-center zpheading-align-tablet-center " data-editor="true"><span>Black Friday used to mean something.</span></h2></div>
<div data-element-id="elm_h4fMKl3QS2qnF-KFvD31Mw" data-element-type="text" class="zpelement zpelem-text "><style></style><div class="zptext zptext-align-center zptext-align-mobile-center zptext-align-tablet-center " data-editor="true"><p></p><div><p style="text-align:left;"><span style="font-family:Georgia, serif;"></span></p><div><p style="text-align:left;">It was the day after Thanksgiving, full stop. In retail lore, that was when the books supposedly tipped from red to black—the moment the profit switch flipped, and everything from that Friday through Christmas counted as gain. Whether or not every retailer’s ledger worked that neatly, the idea carried weight. Businesses built campaigns around that one morning. Newspaper circulars landed like official decrees. People lined up before sunrise because that was the day.</p><p></p><div style="text-align:left;"><br/></div><div style="text-align:left;">One day. Singular. Understood.</div><p></p><p></p><div style="text-align:left;"><br/></div><div style="text-align:left;">Scarcity gave it force. Timing gave it meaning. Because it was rare, it worked.</div><p></p><p></p><div style="text-align:left;"><br/></div><div style="text-align:left;">Then, as usually happens, someone looked at a successful idea and decided success itself must mean it should be stretched, copied, and repeated. Why have one day when you can have a weekend? Why stop there if you can turn it into a week? And once the door was opened, the rest of the industry rushed through it like overgrowth was a business model instead of a warning sign.</div><p></p><p></p><div style="text-align:left;"><br/></div><div style="text-align:left;">So we got Black Friday Weekend. Then Black Friday Week.</div><p></p><p></p><div style="text-align:left;"><br/></div><div style="text-align:left;">For a while, it worked. Early expansion often does. That is the temptation of growth: the first extension looks like proof that the idea has improved, when often all you are really doing is spending down the very thing that made it effective in the first place.</div><p></p><p></p><div style="text-align:left;"><br/></div><div style="text-align:left;">Economists call part of this diminishing returns.</div><p></p><p></p><div style="text-align:left;"><br/></div><div style="text-align:left;">The first extension may capture a few more customers. The second may capture fewer. By the third or fourth, you are not creating more real demand so much as spreading the same demand over a longer stretch of time. The pie does not get bigger. It just gets served earlier and in thinner slices.</div><p></p><p></p><div style="text-align:left;"><br/></div><div style="text-align:left;">But push it far enough, and the problem becomes bigger than diminishing returns.</div><p></p><p></p><div style="text-align:left;"><br/></div><div style="text-align:left;">Eventually the returns go negative.</div><p></p><p></p><div style="text-align:left;"><br/></div><div style="text-align:left;">Because Black Friday was never just a sale. It was a signal.</div><p></p><p></p><div style="text-align:left;"><br/></div><div style="text-align:left;">It told customers: now is the time.</div><div style="text-align:left;">It told retailers: this is the moment that matters.</div><p></p><p></p><div style="text-align:left;"><br/></div><div style="text-align:left;">Signals only work when they remain distinct. Repeat them often enough, and they stop signaling anything at all. They become background noise.</div><p></p><p></p><div style="text-align:left;"><br/></div><div style="text-align:left;">That is where we are now.</div><p></p><p></p><div style="text-align:left;"><br/></div><div style="text-align:left;">Black Friday Month. Holiday Preview Sales. Early Access Events. Christmas in July. Spring Black Friday. Fall Black Friday. A rotating calendar of “best deals of the year” that somehow appears several times a year without a trace of irony.</div><p></p><p></p><div style="text-align:left;"><br/></div><div style="text-align:left;">At some point, retail crossed the line from expanding an event to exhausting it.</div><p></p><p></p><div style="text-align:left;"><br/></div><div style="text-align:left;">The name stayed. The meaning didn’t.</div><p></p><p></p><div style="text-align:left;"><br/></div><div style="text-align:left;">What once created urgency now weakens it. What once felt rare now feels constant. And what once moved people to act now barely registers. Consumers adapt. They always do. When every week is advertised as the biggest sale of the year, people stop treating any of them as special. Purchases get delayed. Discounts become expected. Urgency gets replaced by skepticism.</div><p></p><p></p><div style="text-align:left;"><br/></div><div style="text-align:left;">The market does not stay fooled forever.</div><p></p><p></p><div style="text-align:left;"><br/></div><div style="text-align:left;">And the interesting part is that this kind of breakdown rarely arrives with drama. It does not collapse in one spectacular failure. It simply flattens. The spikes smooth out. The frenzy fades into routine. The line outside the store becomes a browser tab left open while someone compares six “exclusive” sales that all look suspiciously alike.</div><p></p><p></p><div style="text-align:left;"><br/></div><div style="text-align:left;">Black Friday did not disappear.</div><p></p><p></p><div style="text-align:left;"><br/></div><div style="text-align:left;">It dissolved.</div><p></p><p></p><div style="text-align:left;"><br/></div><div style="text-align:left;">Now the phrase sits in the same tired category as “limited time offer” and “while supplies last.” Technically, those phrases still mean something. Functionally, they often mean almost nothing. They have been repeated past the point of information. What remains is habit. Noise. A label trying to live on after the thing it described has worn out.</div><p></p><p></p><div style="text-align:left;"><br/></div><div style="text-align:left;">And maybe that is the real lesson.</div><p></p><p></p><div style="text-align:left;"><br/></div><div style="text-align:left;">We did not merely expand Black Friday.</div><p></p><p></p><div style="text-align:left;"><br/></div><div style="text-align:left;">We consumed it.</div><p></p><p></p><div style="text-align:left;"><br/></div><div style="text-align:left;">We took something that worked because it was rare, amplified it because it worked, and then kept amplifying it long after the logic underneath it broke. Not because it still made sense, but because stepping back would have required admitting something modern marketing hates to admit:</div><p></p><p style="text-align:left;">More is not always better.</p><p></p><div style="text-align:left;"><br/></div><div style="text-align:left;">Sometimes the thing that gives something value is precisely this:</div><p></p><p style="text-align:left;">It does not happen all the time.</p><p></p><div style="text-align:left;"><br/></div>
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