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Creating the right discount strategy can make or break your conversion rates. When Growth Suite presents offers to your visitors, the key is making them irresistible while protecting your profit margins. The more compelling your offer, the higher your chances of converting window shoppers into paying customers.
This guide will show you how to set up smart discount strategies that maximize revenue while minimizing the actual discounts you give away.
Growth Suite offers three different campaign types, and each requires a different discount strategy:
Important note: When a Storewide Campaign is active, all other campaigns automatically pause. This means you can be more generous with storewide discounts since they won’t conflict with your other strategies.
During major shopping events, customer expectations are different. People expect bigger discounts, and competition is fierce. Since your Trigger and Custom Audience campaigns won’t run during these periods, you can afford to be more generous.
This is where Growth Suite really shines. Trigger campaigns only show offers to window shoppers – visitors who aren’t already committed to buying. Dedicated buyers never see these offers, which means you’re not giving away discounts to people who would buy anyway.
Since only hesitant visitors receive these offers, you want to make them as compelling as possible. These people are on the fence about buying, so a strong discount can push them over the edge.
Visitor Type | Behavior | Gets Offer? |
---|---|---|
Dedicated Buyer | Shows strong purchase intent, moves quickly toward checkout | NO |
Window Shopper | Browsing, hesitating, showing interest but not committing | YES |
When you create campaigns for specific audience segments (like cart abandoners or returning visitors), these offers typically should be smaller than your Trigger Campaign discounts. Why? Because you’re targeting people with some level of existing interest, so you don’t need as strong an incentive.
Here’s where Growth Suite gets really clever. Instead of giving everyone the same discount, you can set a minimum and maximum range. The system then gives higher discounts to visitors with lower purchase intent, and smaller discounts to those more likely to buy.
Let’s say you want your average discount across all sales to be around 10%. Here’s how you could set it up:
What happens in practice:
Purchase Intent Level | Discount Received | Reasoning |
---|---|---|
High intent (but still window shopping) | 5-7% | Small push needed |
Medium intent | 8-12% | Moderate incentive required |
Low intent | 13-15% | Strong incentive needed |
Dedicated buyers | 0% | No discount needed |
Result: Your actual average discount across ALL purchases (including those with no discount) might be only 6-7%, even though some customers received 15% off.
The countdown timer creates urgency, but the duration needs to match the shopping context:
Pro tip: Shorter timers create more urgency, but don’t make them so short that customers feel pressured. Test different durations to find what works for your audience.
Let’s say you run an online clothing store with an average order value of $75:
Smart discount strategy isn’t about giving away money – it’s about giving the right discount to the right person at the right time. Growth Suite‘s behavioral intelligence ensures you’re not wasting discounts on customers who would buy anyway, while maximizing the impact on those who need that extra push.
Start with conservative ranges and gradually increase them based on your results. Remember: a 15% discount that converts a window shopper is infinitely better than a 0% discount that results in no sale at all.