Supply Chain Council of European Union | Scceu.org
News

Supply chain issues could make it a big year for gift cards

Supply chain slowdowns could make some popular holiday gift items hard to get this season, meaning it could be a big year for gift cards. A survey by Blackhawk Network found shoppers were planning to spend 27% more on gift cards this year.

Once considered an impersonal and thoughtless present of last resort, gift cards have become not just acceptable but popular — especially among young people — said business professor Dan Horne at Providence College.

Gift cards can be bought and sent online, super niche — say from the local artisan cheese shop — or super broad from an e-commerce giant that sells everything. Or they can be bought from a vendor that doesn’t sell things at all.

“There’s a preference for experiences that they can remember,” Horne said. “You know, a dinner or travel or something like that.”

Retailers love gift cards because they can bring in new customers and lock in future sales. Consumers usually spend 40% more than what’s on the gift card, according to Theresa McEndree with Blackhawk Network, which issues gift cards.

“You’re going to splurge a little bit,” she said. “You’re going to buy something that maybe you wouldn’t normally treat yourself with.” Ideally at a future nonholiday date, when everybody else isn’t trying to buy the same thing.

Related posts

OMB Soliciting Input on Supply Chain Issues

scceu

Plex Systems Announces New Solution to Help Manufacturers Improve Supply Chain Planning and Forecasting Accuracy | State

scceu

How COVID-19 is challenging and changing medtech supply chain management

scceu