
Word on the street (if you consider Bloomberg to be “the street”) is that Amazon Prime Day is shifting from July to June for 2026.
Retail marketers, rev your omnichannel engagement campaigns and get ready to pivot like Ross on Friends.
As a fellow growth marketer, I understand how you might feel pressured by the sudden change, but my sympathy won’t grow your revenue. So, let’s get strategic! I’ve put together a little care package of ways you can exploit this opportunity Amazon kindly carved out for you. I included some real-world examples from a few leading brands: Home Depot, Arezzo & Co, and Now Optics.
Oh, and there’s a calendar at the end, just to make things even easier. Let’s get into it.
At the time I’m writing this, Amazon hasn’t officially announced dates for Prime Day, so nothing is set in stone yet. But frankly, it would be a smart move for various reasons, and here’s why I think the shift is likely:
The Impact: Amazon will leave some retailers in the dust, but you have the opportunity to meet the giant step for step and also smoke the competition. What you have to do is ensure your brand shows up with the right message at the right time using these exploits.
Run, don’t walk, to your customer data and take your AI tool of choice with you.
Your goal is to figure out who you need to engage—look for the deal hunters, the customers who are at high risk of churn, and fence-sitters who need a firm push to reach that first or second purchase.
Audience discovery step-by-step:
Just when you think you’re done predicting, you’re not—keep reading for more.
Fast-paced guerrilla marketing can eat into your budget, especially if you need to spin up campaign creative in a hurry. Trust me, I feel your pain on that one.
Using predictive revenue models, you can quickly make a compelling case to your stakeholders. Show them evidence-based reasons to give you the budget you need to engage customers during Prime Day and shine the spotlight on your brand.
(Just saying, but SAP Engagement Cloud’s AI-Assisted Report Builder can help you move fast.)
A single blast email to your entire customer base won’t cut it, and, if we’re being honest, hasn’t cut it for a long time. Think instead about orchestrating campaigns across channels and building a journey where all roads lead to your brand.
If you want to see a high-stakes, peak-season strategy done right, check out the Now Optics strategy. The eyewear brand nailed its annual back-to-school campaign across email, SMS, web, and digital, which led to 5.8 million engagements. Those are the optics I like to see.
Oh no, your customer is comparison shopping! What are you going to do about it?
Think fast… or take the easier route and set up your real-time trigger architecture to think fast for you. Is your cart abandonment trigger usually set for 3 or 4 hours? That’s too slow. When Prime Day hits, comparison shoppers will take maybe 15-20 minutes to reach a decision.
Use event-driven automation to tighten your trigger parameters during the Prime Day window. Think of it like an overlay for your existing automations.
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Real-Time Signal |
Shopper Mindset |
Trigger Adjustment |
|---|---|---|
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Alert! Your shopper is actively comparing prices! |
Compress from your standard delay to a 15-20-minute trigger for the event. |
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Abandoned Browse |
Your shopper is actively searching but not ready to commit. |
Activate re-engagement trigger only on your top 15 highest-margin SKUs. (Avoid spamming on low-value triggers.) |
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Price-Sensitivity |
This shopper has discount redemption history and is focusing on your sale items. |
Surface your offer on the channel where your shopper is engaging (web, mobile, conversational messaging). |
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Post-Browse Email Open |
High intent! Your shopper chose to open your email out of all the possible emails in their inbox. |
Use real-time product data to dynamically populate the email with the exact items browsed. |
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Conversion |
Your shopper made a purchase, is enjoying the afterglow, and doesn’t want to be bothered. |
Immediately remove converted contacts from trigger queues. |
It’s example time again: Arezzo automated targeted product recommendations based on buyer intent signals. Through Arezzo’s partnership with SAP Engagement Cloud, the brand has seen a 37% increase in Black Friday revenue year over year.
After the dust settles, it’s time to do the real growth work: converting transactional customers into loyal brand fans. Think of it this way: if you fail to nurture your Prime Day buyers now, you’ll have to pay to acquire them again next year.
Have a loyalty program? Start here:
No loyalty program? No problem:
Home Depot has a top-notch strategy for engaging first-time buyers and guiding them via a Welcome campaign. The brand uses progressive profiling to uncover customers’ hobbies, their affinity to the brand, what brought them to Home Depot, and so on.
I don’t know about you, but I love a ready-made marketing calendar to bring a plan together.
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Now through May: Audit your customer data, build audience segments, build campaign automations, align your offer strategies across segments, and tag assets for attribution. |
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May 1–31: Promote early-access teasers to loyal customers. Run predictive scoring, A/B test subject lines, and test automations. |
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June 1–14: Launch your full omnichannel awareness sequence. Begin daily monitoring of customer activity. |
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24–48 hours before Prime Day: Roll out the red carpet by running early access windows for VIP customers and loyalty program members. Surface reminders to loyalty members about their point balances. |
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Prime Day Week: Go time! All in-flight plays go live, so begin in-flight optimizations. Monitor customer activity and adjust creative or suppression lists for underperforming segments. |
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Post Event: Analyze attribution by segment and channel. Score newly acquired customers for predictive lifetime value. Route customers to long-term nurtures based on the scoring, and route lost customers to re-engagement. |
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Beyond: Use the data and insights to plan for Cyber Week and build your case for Q4 budget. |
If you ever want to nerd out about competitive tactics, hit me up on LinkedIn.
From one marketer to another, best of luck and best of strategy!
Kate DeGroot is the kind of Global Growth Marketer who started in startups where “figure it out” is a job description and never quite shook the habit. Now she runs growth programs across the globe, armed with a healthy obsession with data and an unhealthy suspicion of vanity metrics.
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