Sharp Daily
No Result
View All Result
Sunday, November 30, 2025
  • Home
  • News
    • Politics
  • Business
    • Banking
  • Investments
  • Technology
  • Startups
  • Real Estate
  • Features
  • Appointments
  • About Us
    • Meet The Team
Sharp Daily
  • Home
  • News
    • Politics
  • Business
    • Banking
  • Investments
  • Technology
  • Startups
  • Real Estate
  • Features
  • Appointments
  • About Us
    • Meet The Team
No Result
View All Result
Sharp Daily
No Result
View All Result
Home News

Why black Friday in Kenya no longer lives up to the hype

Ruth Atieno by Ruth Atieno
November 30, 2025
in News
Reading Time: 2 mins read

Black Friday has long been marketed as the apex of consumer bargain-hunting, a day when prices supposedly collapse to their lowest levels and households can maximize purchasing power. But in recent years, including here in Kenya, the economic reality beneath the marketing spectacle tells a very different story. Data, consumer-behaviour trends, and retailer pricing strategies increasingly point to a phenomenon economists call discount illusion where perceived savings exceed actual savings.

A Kenyan consumer-awareness piece directly questioned whether Black Friday and Black November promotions truly offer value. According to the report, many local retailers inflate prices before the sale period, only to “slash” them later, creating the illusion of a substantial discount. This tactic, common in price-anchoring strategies, manipulates the reference price, the benchmark against which consumers judge whether a deal seems attractive. By elevating the reference price, retailers make ordinary prices appear like extraordinary bargains. This practice reduces genuine consumer surplus while preserving retailer margins.

The Kenyan market also reflects broader global trends highlighted by international watchdogs. For example, Which?, a UK-based consumer organisation, tracked 175 products for a full year and found that none hit their lowest price on Black Friday. While the data is not Kenyan-specific, it reinforces a similar behavioural pattern: Black Friday has become more about price signalling than real price competition.

From a microeconomic perspective, retailers appear to be leveraging information asymmetry. They know the true historical prices, while most consumers do not. In such an environment, firms possess the incentive to distort the perception of value. The repeated use of “limited time”, “exclusive”, and “up to 70.0% off” cues exploits bounded rationality, where consumers make decisions under imperfect information and emotional pressure.

RELATEDPOSTS

CBK test for long-term bonds investor appetite

November 30, 2025

The rise of digital business, and the future of work

November 30, 2025

Moreover, the proliferation of “Black November”, a month-long discount festival has diluted the original scarcity value of Black Friday. In economic terms, when a promotional event is stretched over time, the marginal utility of urgency declines. Consumers become less responsive to promotional stimuli because the time constraint, which once created a spike in demand, no longer exists. The result is predictable: promotions feel less special, and the actual discounts become harder to identify amidst constant noise.

In sum, Black Friday in Kenya, much like elsewhere is increasingly failing to deliver on its promise. The combination of price inflation before sales, strategic price anchoring, diluted urgency, and rising retail costs has transformed what should be a competitive market event into a largely rhetorical one. For Kenyan consumers seeking real value, the most rational strategy is not to chase the hype, but to evaluate prices across longer time horizons, where true market efficiency can be observed. (Start your investment journey today with the Cytonn MMF, call +2540709101200 or email sales@cytonn.com.)

Previous Post

The rise of digital business, and the future of work

Next Post

CBK test for long-term bonds investor appetite

Ruth Atieno

Ruth Atieno

Related Posts

News

CBK test for long-term bonds investor appetite

November 30, 2025
News

The rise of digital business, and the future of work

November 30, 2025
News

Powering Progress or Dimming Growth? The high Cost of Electricity in Kenya.

November 29, 2025
News

The Unsung Lifeline: How Diaspora Remittances Power Kenya’s Economy

November 29, 2025
News

Kenya Debt Sustainability

November 28, 2025
News

How infrastructure has shaped Kenya’s Economic Growth

November 28, 2025

LATEST STORIES

CBK test for long-term bonds investor appetite

November 30, 2025

Why black Friday in Kenya no longer lives up to the hype

November 30, 2025

The rise of digital business, and the future of work

November 30, 2025

Powering Progress or Dimming Growth? The high Cost of Electricity in Kenya.

November 29, 2025

The Unsung Lifeline: How Diaspora Remittances Power Kenya’s Economy

November 29, 2025

Kenya Debt Sustainability

November 28, 2025

How infrastructure has shaped Kenya’s Economic Growth

November 28, 2025

How Cross-Border Trade Is Powering East Africa’s Economic Integration

November 28, 2025
  • About Us
  • Meet The Team
  • Careers
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
Email us: editor@thesharpdaily.com

Sharp Daily © 2024

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
    • Politics
  • Business
    • Banking
  • Investments
  • Technology
  • Startups
  • Real Estate
  • Features
  • Appointments
  • About Us
    • Meet The Team

Sharp Daily © 2024