Cashback Offers or Discount – Marketing Strategy for Online Sales

by Hunaid Germanwala
cashback or discount

To ensure high sales and greater market share, businesses usually invest heavily in sales activities and marketing promotions. With discount offers and cashback programs, you can aim to build a strong brand in terms of more revenue, higher customer loyalty, and ultimately a bigger market share. However, running discount promotions continuously can harm the brand value and profitability of the company.

Difference Between Cashback and Discounts

Discount offers and Sales

Not every customer applies a coupon code or is price-conscious. Today, the buying decision of online shoppers is based on several factors such as brand affinity and psychological, cultural, and social aspects. People aren’t always price-conscious when it comes to purchasing goods and services that they really want for themselves or their loved ones.

Reducing prices during the sales period can affect additional revenue from such customers. For example, giving a bigger discount coupon is better for people hunting deals on Black Friday or Cyber Monday than reducing the overall price of your products.

Discount Strategy Without Hurting Profit Margins

Ecommerce retailers often face conflict during main shopping days when they reduce the price to offer the product on sale and provide discount codes. Reducing price as well as offering deep discounts erodes the margins and profitability.

In this case, the business can consider creating a sales category on their website and list the products for the short duration (black Friday or cyber Monday) with changed product name and title, for example, ‘Reclining chairs at 30% Off [Cyber Monday Furniture Deal]. The original products can be in their main category with original prices where customers can use discount coupons. This strategy would also enable you to see the effectiveness of various deals such as discount codes, slashed prices, cashback, and free shipping offer through A/B testing.

While discounts may bring in more sales in the short term, they are generally not a good long-term strategy to promote a brand or product. When a business offers a traditional deep discount, they devalue their product and brand. Contrary to many businesses’ beliefs, promotions don’t always have to be direct discounts. Cashback offers are fast replacing direct discounts as a promotional strategy.

***Pro Tip- Rule of 100 as Discount Strategy

Use the rule of 100 for your discount offers. According to the rule of 100, when the price is under $100, a percentage discount is more powerful (10% saving on $10 spent). For over $100, putting the savings as a dollar is often more attractive ($20 saving on $100 spent).***

Cash back Offers

Cashback refers to the option where the spender is promised a percentage of cash or virtual cash for spending made. Customers can redeem their cashback amount on their next purchase. Cashback incentives drive more online and offline business without devaluing or hurting the brand.

Why Cashback Offers are better than Discounts?

Overly use of deep discount promotions makes customers become conditioned to buy only during the ‘sales’ period. This is the basic example of the theory of conditioning. Over time, customers get conditioned and reinforced to buy in bulk and store up to have enough supply until the next sale period. Moreover, they become more focused on price and less on product differentiators. They are forced to perform mental trade-offs based primarily on cost/benefit rather than an emotional attachment to the brand. They are also more likely to switch brands to get a lower price. Over time, the deep discounts lower profit margins significantly, hurting the brand and market share in a big way.

On the other hand, Cashback offers are an effective way to drive and increase sales. Cashback promotions reward ‘loyal’ customers and not those looking to save money. The more money customers spend buying from the business, the greater their reward. So, business is not ‘begging’ customers to buy from it, but just rewarding them for supporting their brand.

***Pro Tip- Use Steadily Decreasing Discounts (SDD Strategy)

The SDD strategy refers to ending discounts by steadily decreasing them. This strategy signals customers of higher future prices. It encourages customers to make a purchase immediately. For example, for sale spanning over three days, offer 30% Off on Day 1, 20% Off on Day 2, and 10% Off on Day 3, instead of Offering 20% Off on all three days. Strategically display the decreasing discounts on your website banners to execute the SDD strategy successfully.

With increasing competition and decreasing attention span of online shoppers, SDD strategy helps increase conversions by inducing regret in customers for missing out on a good deal.***

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Hunaid Germanwala Digital Marketing logo

Hunaid is a health enthusiast and digital marketer. He graduated with a Masters Degree from Ulm University, Germany. Hunaid is working as a Digital Marketing expert at HealthProductForYou.com since 2014. He is a typical INTP whose mind is always buzzing with creative ideas and is eager to explore new perspectives. His weapons of choice are innovation, logical thinking, problem-solving and analytical reasoning. 

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