If you operate in the eCommerce sphere, Christmas preparations are well underway and have been for some time. But what about B2B?
Why do you want to do a Christmas campaign, anyway?
Since youβre reading this article, youβre probably weighing up whether a Christmas campaign is worth the effort. Why?
“Our CEO said we have to“
Yeah, youβre going to have to come up with something.
“Weβve always done one“
Maybe a good reason, maybe not. Take a look at your results from previous years; are they significantly different to your campaigns the rest of the year? If theyβre better, then dash away all! If theyβre worse, what are you doing?!
“Everybody else does it“
Then maybe you stand out better by NOT doing one. Rember βhalf of strategy is choosing what not to do.β
What are you trying to achieve?
If you only know 1 thing about marketing, make it the 95:5 rule. That is, 95% of your target market isnβt currently in a position to buy.
If your customers donβt typically change their behaviour towards you around Christmas, you can still harness the festive vibes to keep your connection with them warm.
Look at how Spotify Wrapped became a huge cultural moment that all kinds of brands have replicated:

β10 things we learned this yearβ type newsletters can remind your audience of the value they get from you without pushing for a sale. Or you can look ahead to the next yearβs trends. The secondary benefit of this is that you can do a βHow did our predictions go?β piece at the end of the year. These make you look great if you got it right, and humble and honest if you missed the mark; win-win!
How do I identify my festive 5%?
Of course, the 95:5 rule means that youβve got some ready-to-buy leads sitting there in December if you can only find them.
One big clue will be how they organise their financial year. If January 1st is the first day of a financial year, then thereβs no way theyβll be making large investments in December.
In the UK, the governmentβs tax year begins on April 6th, so this is also a common choice for businesses too.
On a more 1-to-1 basis, do your best to monitor when your customersβ existing arrangement are due for renewal. If youβre in the SaaS space like Spotler, youβre probably competing with 12- or 24-month contracts. In this case the sweet spot will be 2-3 months before the renewal date, when itβs near enough to be front of mind, but far enough away that youβve got a chance of swooping in.
My brand colours arenβt very Christmassyβ¦
If red, green and white feature strongly in your brand palette, Christmas branding is pretty easy. But when was the last time you saw Santa in blue?

Fortunately, thereβs a wealth of examples that show a short-term change to your brand can actually make you more memorable, as your audienceβs brains fill the gap in themselves:

In short, a Christmas-themed campaign wonβt do any real damage to ability to recognise your brand, as long as youβve done the legwork the rest of the year to establish your place inside your audienceβs minds.
Should we say βHappy Holidaysβ instead?
βHappy Hanukkahβ?
βMerry Kwanzaβ?
“Blessed Bodhi Day”?
Christmas might be the dominant cultural event of December, but itβs far from the only one.
This really comes down to understanding your audience. If you solely serve Buddhists, then Bodhi Day/Rohatsu is a much better go-to than Christmas.
If you arenβt confident in making this call, then either βHappy Holidaysβ or no holiday mention at all are perfectly valid choices.
Whatever you choose, youβd hope that the majority of your audience will take your greeting in the spirit it was meant, rather than getting overly hung up on the specific choice youβve made.
Conclusion: Itβs up to you
Between what youβve done before, pressure from internal stakeholders, and audience expectations, whether to run a Christmas themed campaign or not is a very personal choice.
If you go for it, Spotlerβs Mail+ email builder is the thing you need on your wishlist. With an easy drag-and-drop-editor, brand library and smooth templates, youβll be building gorgeous campaigns in record time. Get started with a demo today.
