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Fortune
Allie Garfinkle

How one e-commerce focused founder, Yiqi Wu of Aimerce, is thinking about Black Friday

(Credit: Brian van der Brug / Los Angeles Times via Getty Images)

I don’t know about you, but I’ve always found Black Friday to be a little scary. 

And not necessarily in the fun Halloween way, either. Perhaps it’s because stories (and urban myths) from the early 2000s about shoppers getting trampled in big-box stores are ingrained in my consciousness. (There’s also almost no discount big enough for me to subject myself to a stadium concert-like crush of humanity.)

But it’s always also occurred to me that brands and retailers are probably far more scared of Black Friday (and its cousin, Cyber Monday) than I ever could be. It’s the ultimate double-edged sword, like a class in college where most of your grade is one test: Black Friday accounts for notable portions of retailers’ annual revenues, and sends the holiday shopping season into full-gear. 

Yiqi Wu, founder and CEO at e-commerce-focused customer intelligence startup Aimerce, says this Black Friday is shaping up to be cutthroat from her vantage point.

"I think this year is extremely competitive, because everybody is launching their campaigns a lot earlier than they were last year,” Wu told Fortune. “If you look at the times when campaigns were launching last year, it was around the beginning of November. This year, it was late October. It was already Black Friday in October.”

It’s Wu’s first Black Friday as founder of Upfront Ventures-backed Aimerce, which she started in 2023 and whose customers include shoe retailer Vivaia, spices company Evermill, and Bryan Johnson’s Blueprint. So, though she has lots of data to turn to, this is her first year watching the madness in real-time. 

Wu’s been surprised by the last-minute changes she’s seen brands make to their campaigns, reflecting just how serious the Black Friday scramble gets as retailers try to "squeeze out as much as they can" from the holiday season. In some sense, it’s always been like this, because the Black Friday stakes are just so high. 

"If you don't have the basics checked in terms of how your website operates, and how you can best communicate and know your customer on any given day, you're kind of done,” said Upfront Ventures general partner Kobie Fuller, who years ago was the CMO of e-commerce fashion juggernaut Revolve. On Black Friday, “if you don't have your stuff together, it’s a significant potential negative moment for you in terms of loss of sales."

E-commerce enablement has had its ups and downs as a sector, particularly in terms of VC backing—in 2022, the space fell out of favor, but by this year has seen some recovery. But Black Friday is an opportunity for enterprising startups, now and always. 

“This month has been my fastest-growth month ever since I launched product,” said Wu. “It's because I solve a very hair-on-fire problem for people.”

See you Monday,

Allie Garfinkle
Twitter:
@agarfinks
Email: alexandra.garfinkle@fortune.com
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