I’ve been in Out of Home advertising long enough to know that the festive season starts earlier every year. By the 1st of November, the shelves are stocked with limited edition seasonal products, the ads are live, and the festive buzz around ooh advertising Christmas campaigns is already building. Mariah Carey has defrosted, and if you’re not paying close attention, you’d be forgiven for thinking the moment has already passed.
But it hasn’t.
We’ve just entered November. Cycle 23 for those of us who live our lives in two-week cycles – and what I’m seeing in our latest Christmas grocery behaviour insights is that some of the biggest decisions and biggest purchases are still ahead. For brands, this is the time to continue with a strong Christmas marketing strategy that includes outdoor advertising Christmas campaigns to capture attention before shoppers go in store.
This piece builds on our last article, “Why OOH Can’t Be Ignored”, which looked at overall Christmas shopping behaviour. Now, we’re zooming in on how Irish consumers shop for Christmas groceries. The what, when, and why – and why the final two weeks of the year, are anything but quiet.
HOW IRISH CONSUMERS SHOP DURING THE FESTIVE SEASON
Christmas grocery shopping isn’t one big moment, it’s a series of decisions across the festive season. Each with its own mood, its own plan, and its own purchases, and if you’ve ever found yourself panic-buying cranberry sauce on the 24th, you’ll know exactly what I mean. In fact, Irish consumers made 23 trips in December last year. That’s six more in store grocery trips than the UK average of 17.
It starts with planning. Quiet, considered. People thinking about who they’re hosting over the Christmas holidays, what food they’ll cook, and how much they’ll spend.
Then comes stocking. The pantry fillers, the drinks, the staples. It’s when your mum buys the tin of Christmas roses and hides them above the kitchen counter for all to see, while simultaneously warning nobody to touch until the big day. It’s the first wave of festive season spending, and it’s where we start to see a shift in consumers behaviour. 31% of shoppers say they treat their families at Christmas by buying more confectionery and other premium products they wouldn’t usually go for.
Q: You mentioned you write a list prior to your grocery shop. When do you write your shopping list?
But the main shop is where things really shift. It’s mid-to-late December. Loading up on fresh food, meats, mince pies. The fridge is full, and the trolley is heavier than it’s been all year, and not just figuratively, 29% of shoppers estimate their Christmas grocery budget to be over €300. This is when 81% of customers are making their grocery list – not weeks in advance, but in the final days before the shop. In fact, 39% make it 2-3 days before, while 42% of customers make it the same day.
And let’s not forget hosting. We’ve all been there, the phase none of us planned for, but everyone shops in. Forgotten cranberry sauce, more Brennan’s for the sambos. The “we need more of that” moment. It’s reactive and of high value for retailers.
OUTDOOR ADVERTISING DRIVES IN-STORE GROCERY PURCHASES
Last year, December 23rd was Ireland’s biggest grocery shopping day, with €107 million spent in sales across 24 hours. This year, 71% of Irish shoppers plan on doing their Christmas grocery shop in store rather than online shopping. That’s why outdoor advertising matters. It reaches shoppers on the move, influencing decisions before they enter in store. Outdoor advertising formats in roadside environments, near supermarkets, and in high-footfall areas keep brands visible during the festive season, driving impulse buys and reinforcing planned purchases.
The Christmas shop has become an institution. It’s the late-night dash, the trolley traffic jam, the moment when excitement kicks in and the “just in case” items start piling up. When brands go quiet, they lose visibility at the most critical moment. If your out of home isn’t live, you’re invisible.
WHY OOH ADVERTISING MATTERS DURING THE FESTIVE PERIOD
Q: What advertising, if any, influences you the most when it comes to grocery shopping?
Irish consumers don’t stop shopping after December 15th, they’re still making decisions, still being influenced, and still spending big – 17% agree that out of home advertising impacts their grocery choices. For media planners, that’s the opportunity. From the late shop to the hosting dash, these moments are emotional, high value, and driven by impulse as much as planning. Out of Home advertising connects with shoppers when it counts. Creating an emotional connection in the real world and influencing choices before they hit the aisles. For brands, going quiet means going invisible, and in the final weeks of the year, that’s the costliest mistake you can make.
Written by Ciara Gibney, Marketing Manager at Talon Ireland. This research is based on an online methodology of 500 respondents 16+, gone to field between the 6-8th of October. For the full suite of out of home advertising results reach out to [email protected].