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Todays definitely a snow day. If I take twitter as a reputable source then there’s been anywhere between 4 and 8 inches across Leeds this morning. And it’s still going strong.

Most of the UK will be making snowballs instead of working today, or just maybe hiting the world wide web for some shopping
What does this mean for the economy?
Buses can’t get anywhere, the post will be delayed, schools are shut, people won’t get to work and productivity will be as bad as on Tyneside when an ex-Real Madrid and England striker signs for Newcastle.
Not to mention the high streets who will have to endure wet umbrellas and slushy entrances all for a handful of bedraggled punters who braved the conditions or are stuck in the town centre.
All round, snow days are probably slow days, economically.
But I wonder whether the same applies to online retailers? Surely a day when many people are usually cooped up at work shouts opportunity to those flexible enough to move on their feet. There’s potentially a lot of people at home today with a little more time to turn the PC on whilst the kids are watching the box and have a browse for the replacements for those unwanted presents or a holiday to get away from all this weather?
If you’ve got some spare budget and are willing to take a punt, I’d be tempted to take a gamble and capitalise on this theory, ensuring PPC visibility, a burst of display and maybe even a well-worded, quick-thinking email, and maybe just turn a slow snow day into a blizzard of online enquiries or sales.
Tags: economy, high street, online, online advertising, Retail, retailers, snow -

I for one won’t be found online shopping on Christmas Day. I’ll have plunged deep into the Real Ale Reviews beer cupboard to sample some of my finest beer treats, enjoying seeing my family and tucking into a smorgasbord of Christmas treats and luxuries: peanuts, cheeses and those fancy See’s candies that my granddad gets sent from San Francisco every year.
But according to the Telegraph, 4 million of us will be letting the Christmas washing-up pile high whilst they rush to their shiny new laptops and go crazy in the January…no New Year’s….no Boxing Day…sorry, Christmas Day sales.
In fact the sale will start on Christmas Eve as, according to the paper, Halfords, Comet, B&Q and John Lewis amongst others will be opening up their sites to hoards of price savvy bargain hunters 36 hours before the bricks and mortar stores unlock their doors.
Last year I saw some interesting trends with retailers at this time of year, but didn’t see the huge Christmas Day rush. But methinks their may be something to this news as increasingly online connected population have the ability to look up ‘what they could have won’ within seconds of being disappointed by their pressies. That may be a cynical outlook but take some electrical items like sat navs, where its easy to select a slightly wrong model. And Halford’s third busiest traffic day last year was Christmas Day.
There’s also simply the people who know that there will be great savings to be had but know that if they wait until the 27th or 28th to hhit the shops (online or offline) that stock will be long gone. Once the turkey’s prepared on Christmas Eve these people may well be sitting down with a shopping comparison site rather than a rerun of Only Fools And Horses.
Implications for marketers and retailers? Do you ensure a perfect PPC presence or comprehensive shopping comparison listings? A two day takeover of a large portal? Or simply invest in servers to cope with the rush?
Tags: boxing day, christmas day, christmas eve, mobile internet, online population, Retail, sales, telegraphI’d say this shopping on Christmas Day malarkey is all very sad, but I know for a fact I have a Christmas Day blog post planned. I think I’ll set it to auto publish…!
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