Every Q4 postmortem reveals the same pattern: the stores that had a monster November planned it in September. The stores that had a mediocre one were still tweaking landing pages the day before Black Friday. Q4 rewards preparation disproportionately because the window is compressed — there's no time to fix what breaks during peak.
Here's the 90-day playbook, week by week, that turns Q4 into the largest revenue quarter of the year for $100K+/month operators. Even at smaller scale, the same system holds. Start in September for next year.
Why Q4 is different
Three structural changes distinguish Q4 from the rest of the year:
- Intent is higher. Gift-buyers are active purchasers, not browsers. Conversion rates rise 20–40% across categories.
- Ad costs spike. Meta and Google CPMs rise 30–80% through November. Your CPA goes up — but your AOV and conversion rate go up more.
- Competition for attention explodes. Every brand is emailing, advertising, and promoting. Cutting through requires preparation, not last-minute discounts.
October: the 60-day prep window
Week 1 (early Oct): Inventory + supplier
- Place a 90-day stock order with your supplier. Do not depend on just-in-time for Q4. Minimum: 3x your September sales volume in inventory by early November.
- Confirm cut-off dates for last shipments out of China (typically Dec 5–10 for US Dec 25 delivery).
- Establish a secondary supplier if you don't have one. Primary supplier failures during BFCM are common.
Week 2 (mid Oct): Creative production
- Shoot or commission 20+ new creatives. Your Q4 creative pipeline needs 4–5x the normal volume.
- Create gift-angle versions: "Give the gift of [benefit]," "For the [X] in your life," etc.
- Build holiday-specific landing pages with gift guides, bundles, and holiday-themed positioning.
Week 3 (late Oct): Email warmup
- Start warming up your email list: increase send frequency gradually to build sender reputation before Nov volume hits.
- Run a list re-engagement campaign to clean out dormant subscribers (protects deliverability during peak).
- Plan your BFCM email calendar: 15–20 sends between Nov 15 and Dec 1.
Week 4 (end Oct): Offers and pricing
- Design your BFCM offer structure. Best-performing structure for 2026: tiered discounts (buy 1 / 20% off, buy 2 / 30% off, buy 3+ / 40% off + free shipping).
- Build gift bundles with a single SKU or cross-category. Bundles are 30–50% of BFCM revenue for top operators.
- Set up automated countdown timers for your landing pages.
November: ramp up
Week 1–2 (early Nov): Pre-BFCM warm-up
- Begin mentioning Black Friday in emails without committing to the offer yet. Builds anticipation.
- Add "Save $X now, more to come on Black Friday" incentives for VIP/list members.
- Increase ad budget 20% to start capturing holiday search intent.
Week 3 (mid Nov): The early access play
This is where top operators separate from the pack. Instead of waiting for Black Friday, offer your email list and past customers early access to the sale starting Nov 20–22. Three benefits:
- Captures revenue before Meta CPMs peak.
- Rewards list loyalty, reinforcing the open rate for your BFCM sends.
- Generates social proof (early reviews, UGC) you can use during BFCM proper.
BFCM week: the execution
Five days of compressed execution. Done right, this is 15–25% of your entire year's revenue. Here's the plan:
| Day | Primary move | Email sends |
|---|---|---|
| Thu (Thanksgiving) | "Early Black Friday" — full sale opens | 2 (morning + evening) |
| Fri (Black Friday) | Peak ad spend, all channels firing | 3 (midnight, noon, evening) |
| Sat | "Missed Black Friday" angle, urgency ramps | 2 |
| Sun | "Last day before Cyber Monday" messaging | 2 |
| Mon (Cyber Monday) | Final 24h — maximum urgency | 4 (morning, midday, evening, last-hours) |
Email cadence during BFCM
Normal month: 8–10 campaign sends. BFCM week alone: 13 campaign sends. Your list will tolerate this because (a) it's the one week of the year when everyone expects it, and (b) your offers are genuinely the year's best.
The single highest-conversion window of the entire year is typically Cyber Monday 6pm-11pm ET. 40% of BFCM week revenue for some operators lands here. Max out ad budget in this window. It's 5 hours; go hard.
Ad strategy during BFCM
- Raise budgets 2–3x starting Black Friday. Past the 20%/3-day rule that applies during normal months — BFCM is a different regime.
- Dedicated "Black Friday" creative with the discount front and center. Normal brand creative underperforms here because urgency is what converts.
- Retargeting is critical. 40%+ of BFCM conversions on paid come from retargeted traffic. Scale retargeting audiences aggressively.
December: the post-peak revenue
Most operators declare victory Dec 1 and coast. The ones scaling hardest recognize December has two distinct revenue phases:
Dec 1–15: Gift shopping peak
- Gift messaging, gift packaging, gift cards. "Ships in time for Christmas" becomes the dominant hook.
- Typical revenue: 70% of November. Meaningful quarter-driver still.
Dec 15–25: Last-minute gift
- Shift to digital gift cards if you're past physical shipping cutoffs.
- Bundle "gift card + physical product shipping later" as a backup.
- Heavy email focus on self-gifting ("treat yourself this year").
Dec 26–31: The after-Christmas window
- Gift card redemptions, returns-turned-exchanges, January prep buyers.
- Light promotional calendar. A single "year-end close-out" email typically does well.
The retention play nobody runs
Q4 acquires customers you'd never otherwise get — gift buyers, one-time holiday shoppers, people converted by an aggressive discount. Most of them disappear after one order. The operators who turn Q4 into a recurring advantage have a January retention campaign specifically for Q4 buyers.
- Welcome 2.0: A dedicated post-Q4 welcome flow for first-time buyers acquired during BFCM. Different from your normal welcome because these customers were price-driven — you need to sell them on the brand, not just the product.
- January winback: Target gift recipients (who didn't buy themselves but received your product) with a "keep your new [product] working its best" email. Captures consumable refills and accessories.
- February cohort analysis: Compare Q4 cohort repeat rate vs. rest-of-year cohorts. If it's meaningfully lower (as is typical), that's the gap that future Q4 plans should target.
Q4 isn't a revenue spike — it's a cohort event. The acquisition you make in October and November is the customer base you serve for the whole next year. Plan for both.
Three months to Q4. The operators already starting on inventory and creative are the ones who'll do 40% of their annual revenue in Q4 this year. The ones waiting until Halloween will be the ones posting stressed screenshots of ad accounts by Thanksgiving. Which group you join is decided in the calendar you open this week.