It’s official. After months of speculation, Amazon finally confirmed that Prime Day 2020 will happen in October. The 48-hour retail event will span October 13 & 14 and some deals will run on Amazon’s Global Store until October 15.
Like years prior, Amazon has started offering certain deals prior to the official kick-off. Read on to learn more.
Shoppers can go to the Prime Day landing page right now and snag themselves a deal.
Above: Screenshot from the Amazon.com Prime Day landing page
As Bobsled CEO Kiri Masters predicted on Forbes earlier this year, Amazon’s own tech and daily essentials products are getting pushed with these pre Prime Day deals. There are always new versions of the Kindle, Echo and Fire tech products on the way - Amazon needs to act quickly and sell mass amounts of hardware at a steep discount if necessary.
COVID has also placed great strain on Amazon’s fulfillment capacity - by selling through a lot of their own bulky essentials inventory this creates valuable space at their FCs. Considering all of these factors, it’s highly likely that Amazon will continue aggressively pushing deals for their own products until the end of Q4.
Above: Currently 19 of Amazon’s daily essentials products are being promoted via the highly trafficked Amazon.com Prime Day landing page
In the lead up to October 13, there’s a promo running called Support Small. By spending $10 on select small businesses, Prime Members will get $10 credit for Prime Day deals. This $10 credit will be funded entirely by Amazon. Support Small is currently being promoted on the main Prime Day landing page with a prominent banner ad.
Above: Screenshot from the Amazon.com Prime Day landing page
Amazon have used the Support Small landing page to promote select small business owners selling on their platform.
Above: Screenshot from the Amazon.com Support Small Landing Page
There is also a banner ad at the bottom encouraging small business owners to sign up for Seller Central.
Above: Screenshot from the Amazon.com Support Small Landing Page
This promotion of small businesses is an interesting counterpoint to Amazon’s own in-house Prime Day deals. It’s letting customers know ‘sure, we do sell a lot of our own mass market products, but here’s a bunch of interesting items from smaller brands too’. Amazon’s fulfillment machine was a saving grace for many small businesses during the first wave of COVID. Support Small is a strategic play by Amazon to get more small businesses on the channel, widening their total product assortment.
As outlined in our recent Prime Day 2020 Prep Guide, many brands have decided to sidestep this year’s event for a variety of reasons. A common concern is selling too much inventory at the beginning of Q4 and then running into stock-out issues later in the quarter.
If you have decided not to participate in Prime Day 2020, there may be an opportunity to grasp in the immediate aftermath.
On the right: Bobsled CEO Kiri Masters
If you are participating, here are some suggestions from the Bobsled team:
On the left: Jordan Ripley, Bobsled Project Manager