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Cyber Monday online sales decreased in 2021 for first time ever, as shoppers adopt new habits

Last year’s Cyber Monday haul was $10.8 billion. Analysts predicted that 2021 sales would top that, but they were wrong.

Cyber Monday online sales decreased in 2021 for first time ever, as shoppers adopt new habits

[Source Images: ComicSans/iStock; Prostock-Studio/iStock]

BY Clint Rainey2 minute read

Shoppers dropped a reported $10.7 billion yesterday on Cyber Monday purchases. That’s a ton of money, but the surprise takeaway is that it marks the first decrease from the previous year’s numbers since anyone started measuring them. According to data from Adobe Analytics, this year’s tally fell by 1.4%. Last year’s Cyber Monday haul was $10.8 billion.

The decrease follows a pattern that’s begun to emerge this season: On Black Friday, retailers also reported a decline in online sales. Last year set a new record of $9 billion. But this year, Black Friday online sales dropped to $8.9 billion. And Adobe says Thanksgiving Day shoppers spent $5.1 billion online in 2021, which represents no increase from 2020’s sales numbers.

The reasons why seem to boil down to pretty obvious ones, including massive inventory shortages and unimpressive discounts from brands and chains that suffered hard years too. But there are some not-so-obvious explanations as well. One side effect of almost two years of consumers shopping at home for any and every item they need means they aren’t really holding out anymore for huge deals or big shopping holidays. Call it boredom, lack of self-control, jumping on the “Black Friday-worthy” deals Amazon started plugging in early October, or perhaps people simply trying to maximize their use of a product (if you’re trapped at home, what good is a new grill if it doesn’t come out of its box until there’s snow on the ground?).

On one hand, the slowdown seems to have caught some industry experts off guard. Just a month ago, even Adobe predicted the 2021 Cyber Monday would break previous sales records, estimating retailers would capture up to $11.3 billion that day. That number proved to be off by more than 5%.

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Yet on the other hand, the entire holiday season is still expected to break e-commerce sales records, partly because of how shoppers are spreading their spending over more days. Abode’s guess is that the season should crack $910 billion globally—yes, nearly a trillion dollars, and an 11% increase since 2020. It says digital sales between November 1 and Cyber Monday are already 12% above last year’s. This is a 29-day period, and for 22 of those days, shoppers apparently went online and dropped more than $3 billion, itself another record. Adobe estimates online sales for the last two months of 2021 will break $207 billion nationwide, also good enough to mark a 10% jump.

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Clint Rainey is a Fast Company contributor based in New York who reports on business, often food brands. He has covered the anti-ESG movement, rumors of a Big Meat psyop against plant-based proteins, Chick-fil-A's quest to walk the narrow path to growth, as well as Starbucks's pivot from a progressive brandinto one that's far more Chinese. Previously, he worked for New York Magazine, where he was part of teams that won National Magazine and James Beard awards More


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