Holiday retail: Pushback on Thanksgiving day sales

November 19, 2015
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EXPERTS ADVISORY

ANN ARBOR—University of Michigan Ross School faculty are available for interviews on what the retail industry will buzz about this year, including pushing Black Friday to Wednesday, as Radio Shack has announced, and why mass merchants are unlikely to shut their doors on Thanksgiving.

Jun Li, assistant professor of technology and operations, researches operations management and business analytics topics such as revenue management, pricing, consumer behavior, and economic and social networks.

“Offering Black Friday deals earlier not only allows retailers to get a head start in the competition, but also catch early demand signals and hence be more responsive in their promotional strategies and in offerings,” she said. “Another obvious benefit is to spread logistic pressures over time and ensure timely and reliable deliveries, which becomes increasingly important as consumers get more demanding on speed.”

Contact: 734-763-4612, junwli@umich.edu


Puneet Manchanda is a professor of marketing. His most recent work has focused on marketing strategy problems in social media and the pharmaceutical, high-tech, gaming and insurance industries.

A number of retailers are staying closed on Thanksgiving Day including Nordstrom, Home Depot, Barnes & Noble, GameStop, Menard’s, Pier 1 Imports and Crate and Barrel. Outdoor retailer REI also will stay closed on Black Friday.

Manchanda doesn’t expect this to become a wider trend, nor does he think it’ll hurt the bottom lines of the retailers.

“Many of the retailers that have announced closures on Thanksgiving and Black Friday are more niche stores that typically don’t sell the big holiday categories—clothing, toys and electronics,” he said. “So the impact on their sales isn’t going to be significant.

“Stores such as REI also have the kind of customer base that may react positively to to giving employees free reign to spend Black Friday outdoors. It can build more goodwill for the company, leading to higher loyalty and more sales in the future. Retailers, including REI, will still allow shoppers to buy off their websites on Black Friday. So the online presence will also mitigate any potential drop in sales.

The bigger, general retailers are unlikely to follow suit and shut down Thanksgiving day. “The stakes are too high for them.”

Contact: 734-358-7168, pmanchan@umich.edu


Scott Rick is an assistant professor of marketing. His research focuses on understanding the emotional causes and consequences of consumer financial decision-making. Rick is particularly interested in understanding the behavior of the extremes “tightwads” and “spendthrifts.”

“Radio Shack certainly seems like an unlikely trendsetter. And I don’t expect the Wednesday before Thanksgiving promotion to do much to improve their sales, or to be a promotion that’s widely used elsewhere,” he said. “If anything, the trend seems to be protecting Thanksgiving as a special day—many retailers are starting to brag about how they aren’t making their employees work on Thanksgiving. REI is going so far as to close their brick-and-mortar stores on Black Friday. In this context, big sales on the Wednesday before Thanksgiving may be seen as an unwelcome intrusion on the holiday.”

When thinking about “tightwads” and spendthrifts,” Rick has a theory he’d like to test this year.

“I do have a holiday hypothesis,” he said. “I think within couples and families, where you have a lot of background information on the gift-giver’s psychology, tightwads get more social credit for buying an expensive gift than spendthrifts. The intuition here is that tightwads find spending really painful, so for them to buy an expensive gift, they really had to make a psychological sacrifice. For a spendthrift gift-giver, buying an expensive gift probably caused them little distress. It wasn’t much of a psychological sacrifice. This is something I’d like to test this holiday season.”

Contact: 713-252-5654, srick@umich.edu