Nov 17 2013
Re: Does holiday advertising come too early in the year?
Andrew Leong brought up some very important and relatable points in his blog post regarding “Christmas creep,” which is a term describing how companies aim to artificially lengthen the holiday season. I think we’ve all had that moment where, upon hearing the first notes of Christmas carols streaming through the mall way too early or seeing Christmas displays before Halloween, we’ve wanted to give the instigator a piece of our mind. Granted, the statistics show that a good number of people (40%, to be specific) have reported purchasing Christmas presents before Halloween. Looking at social trends, it’s possible that the rationale behind this, for both marketers and consumers, is the social trend revolving around how people nowadays tend to consider themselves extremely busy. But isn’t there a certain point at which Christmas is creeping a bit too close, though? The trend is that it’s been getting pushed earlier and earlier, so a decade or two from now, will we start hearing those sleigh bells jingling in the middle of summer?
That scares me, to be quite honest, but maybe I’m just old-fashioned. Personally, I think that going out of your way to buy gifts months in advance turns a holiday revolving around giving into more of a chore. To put it simply, it detracts from the Christmas spirit. Of course, one could always argue about how rampant consumerism has already destroyed the values of Christmas a long time ago, but that would be digging into a whole new can of worms. The bottom line is that I think holiday advertising should stay where it is, since regardless of whether consumers buy presents sooner or later, they’ll still have to eventually. At the very least, marketers should focus their efforts on that ‘eventually’ for the sake of relevance.