Shoppers Spend $5.5 Billion on Small Business Saturday
Many small businesses have a reason to be jolly this holiday season. Despite lingering economic concerns, Small Business Saturday sales data is slightly better than expected.
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Thos Robinson | WireImage | Getty Image Chloe Sevigny, at Other Music, shops locally for Small Business Saturday founded by American Express on November 26, 2011. |
U.S. Consumers spent $ 5.5 billion at small businesses on Saturday Nov. 24, according to the Small Business Saturday Consumer Insights Survey, released yesterday by the National Federation of Independent Business (NFIB) and American Express [AXP Loading… () ].
Pre-holiday surveys estimated that shoppers would spend $ 5.3 billion. Since this is the first year NFIB and Amex have tracked consumer spending on Small Business Saturday, here is no comparable sales data for previous years.
(Read more: Guess What? Small Business Saturday Worked)
Nonetheless, momentum for Small Business Saturday seems to be growing. Indeed, consumer awareness of Small Business Saturday jumped to 67 percent from 34 percent just two weeks ago, according to NFIB and Amex.
“The good news is that consumers are aware of shopping small and they are doing it in a lot of different ways,” said Patricia Norins, a spokesperson for Small Business Saturday.
Small Business Saturday — the Saturday after Thanksgiving — was created by American Express in 2010 as a way to drum up more business for small companies who may not benefit from Black Friday and Cyber Monday sales boosts like their larger counterparts do.
Indeed, a recent report by Bank of America [BAC Loading… ()
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Getty Images President Barack Obama and daughters Sasha Obama and Malia Obama shop at One More Page Books on Small Business Saturday November 24, 2012 in Arlington, Virginia. |
Nonetheless, it’s clear that many small merchants are doing what they can to make Small Business Saturday successful, placing decals on storefronts and using online tools and materials to get the word out.
(Read more: What Big Companies Get From Helping Small Companies)
More than 350 small business organizations supported the nationwide initiative with more than 50 Chambers of Commerce and 60 groups organizing events and activities in support of the day. There has also been a big social media campaign, with more than 3.2 million Facebook ()
While consumers remain concerned about the economy, holiday shopping hasn’t been abandoned. Total spending for Thanksgiving weekend rose 13 percent to $ 59.1 billion from a year ago, according to the National Retail Federation, which does not break out the data by business size.
A National Retail Federation consumer survey conducted by BIGinsight found that shoppers spent an average of spent $ 423 over the weekend, up 6.3 percent from $ 398 last year.
(Read more: The National Retail Federation expects holiday sales to increase 4.1 percent to $ 586.1 billion this year. Meanwhile, online sales on Cyber Monday rose 30.3 percent over 2011, according to IBM Benchmark, which tracks online sales.