By Dave McEvoy, DMAC Media
Most ecommerce retailers live and die by the same calendar. Black Friday, Cyber Monday, and Christmas dominate marketing budgets, while the rest of the year is filled with smaller, less inspired pushes. But what if retailers stopped chasing singular peaks and instead built growth around a more predictable, and profitable, pattern?
Seasonality is dependent on your target market. In this article, we’ll use the example of a home and hardware retailer – but the insights apply well beyond their sector. Done right, seasonality is not just a marketing flourish. It can multiply profits, drive margins, and is one of the most effective ways to stay ahead of competitors stuck on autopilot.
First, know your customers
Seasonality isn’t universal. What sparks one shopper into action leaves another uninterested. Before you start mapping promotions by the calendar, you need to understand who you’re selling to.
For a hardware retailer, those customer types might look like this:
• The Weekend Warrior: tackling DIY projects on Saturdays.
• The Professional Tradesman: buying in bulk, with speed and price in mind.
• The Home Improver: looking for seasonal upgrades or quick fixes.
• The First-Time Buyer: uncertain but eager, in need of starter kits and guidance.
• The Emergency Shopper: buying under pressure when something breaks.
Each of these profiles experiences different seasonal triggers. A homeowner in October is sealing draughts, while a tradesman in April is sourcing materials for roofing jobs. Understanding these nuances ensures your marketing is relevant.
Building a “customer seasonality map”
Think beyond the typical retail calendar. Instead, chart the year in the life of your customer.
March: DIYers prep gardens and clean patios.
April: Tradesmen take on outdoor builds.
October: Homeowners insulate and weatherproof.
January: First-time buyers recover from their first winter and plan renovations.
This exercise turns the calendar into a playbook. Instead of generic promotions, you’re aligning offers to real customer needs in real time.
From insights to action: The 12-month promotional calendar
Once the profiles and seasonal patterns are clear, translate them into a structured promotional calendar.
January: Storage solutions and touch-ups.
March: Garden kits and compost.
July: Pest control and summer maintenance.
October: Draught sealing and insulation.
December: Last-minute repair kits and gifting bundles.
Layer in local events to add relevance. A campaign that ties into a bank holiday weekend or a sporting final (“Get the patio done before the Euros final”) will always resonate more than a blanket “25% off” message.
The weather: A forgotten sales trigger
In markets like the UK, the weather is as powerful a driver of demand as any sale. A sunny April weekend can empty a full stock of BBQs, while a September cold snap sends heaters flying off the shelves.
Smart ecommerce teams track the forecast as closely as their analytics dashboards. Agile campaigns like an email on Thursday about sunshine-ready products or a WhatsApp alert about roof prep before a storm can deliver massive returns compared to months of generic ads.
Prioritise profit, not just volume
Retailers often default to chasing volume with high-turnover, low-margin products. The smarter approach is to align seasonal promotions with profitability.
• Bundle products into seasonal kits to lift average order value.
• Feature mid-range and premium tools over budget items.
• Create how-to content that guides customers towards higher-margin products.
• Use urgency messaging tied to seasonal cut-offs e.g. last chance to paint before the frost!
• Build upsell paths that feel helpful – extra brushes with decking oil, insulation tape with heaters.
Seasonality isn’t about selling more of everything. It’s about selling more of the right things at the right time.
The bottom line: create demand, don’t wait for It
Ecommerce doesn’t need to revolve around flash sales and holiday countdowns. The real opportunity lies in syncing your business with the rhythms of your customers’ lives.
That means defining clear customer profiles and mapping their needs across the year. Time promotions with seasonal moments, weather shifts, and local events, then prioritise margin-rich products.
Retailers who master this don’t just capture demand, they create it. In a crowded ecommerce landscape, that’s the true competitive edge.