Site icon PlanningShop

The Biggest Small Business Day of the Year

Biggest Small Business Day

The most important day of the year for small business is only a few weeks away. Is your business ready?

In just six short years since it was first observed, “Small Business Saturday” has become a sales powerhouse, driving traffic to local and small businesses during the all-important holiday season.  It’s now an American institution, coming the Saturday after Thanksgiving. This year it’s November 28.

If you run a small business—retail, hospitality, service, online—it’s time to get ready to make the most of this day when consumers want to “Shop Small.”

In my more than two decades involved with the small business community, I’ve never seen a more effective or successful campaign than Small Business Saturday. The President shops small on that day. Congress and Governors and Mayors, Democrats and Republicans, young and old, support Small Business Saturday.

Most importantly, shoppers spend money that day. Billions and billions.

Consider this:

“Small Business Saturday has cemented itself as an important part of the holiday shopping season. Each year, small businesses around the country look to the day as a way to jump start their holiday sales,” said Denise Pickett, President, American Express OPEN. American Express founded Small Business Saturday in 2010, and has committed huge resources to the day ever since.

Work with Neighborhood Champions. Last year, more than 3000 local groups hosted Small Business Saturday events encouraging local consumers to shop small. 

“Small businesses are partnering with other businesses in their community alongside neighborhood champions, local associations and government officials to celebrate the day on November 28 by hosting events and spreading the word to their customers,” according to Pickett.

There’s probably one in your area, like these:
Get your business ready:
Keep customers coming back:

Finally, be sure to shop small yourself this November 28. In my family, we’ve made Small Business Saturday an annual tradition, with coffee at an independent cafe, shopping small at neighborhood stores and lunch at a local restaurant. It’s a great way to start the holidays and support our communities too.


Copyright, Rhonda Abrams, 2015

This article originally ran in USA Today on November 6, 2015

Exit mobile version