Tactic #5: Know when to stick with the plan (and when to scrap it)
Here’s something most Black Friday survival guides won’t tell you: Not every change is worth making.
The pressure to pivot can be just as dangerous as being too rigid. When you see a competitor’s campaign or notice a trending topic, the temptation is to drop everything and adjust your strategy. But sometimes the best move is to trust your original plan and let it play out.
Ask yourself these questions before you make a major change:
Will this adjustment actually improve performance, or does it just feel urgent? Sometimes what seems like a crisis is really just noise. If your campaign is based on a solid strategy and strong creative, a competitor’s similar offer might not require a response.
Do you have enough time to execute this change well? A rushed pivot that goes live with typos or broken links does more damage than sticking with your original plan. Quality still matters, even when you’re moving fast.
Is this change aligned with your brand and your Black Friday goals? Trend-jacking can be tempting, but if it doesn’t make sense for your audience or your products, you’re diluting your message instead of strengthening it.
Does your team have the bandwidth to make this happen? Your people are already stretched thin during Black Friday week. Sometimes the smartest decision is to protect their capacity for the campaigns you’ve already committed to rather than adding more last-minute work.
Here’s a practical framework:
Create a decision-making protocol before Black Friday starts. Define what types of changes are worth making (inventory sellouts, major competitive threats, significant trending opportunities) and what types aren’t (minor messaging tweaks, aesthetic preferences, trends that don’t align with your brand).
Designate one person as the final decision-maker for campaign pivots. This prevents endless debates and ensures someone is empowered to say “we’re making this change” or “we’re sticking with the plan.”
The most flexible campaigns aren’t the ones that change constantly. They’re the ones that change strategically, with clear reasons and confident execution.
