Guides
November 11, 2025
Small Business Saturday TV Advertising: Your Complete Campaign Guide
Make the most of the biggest day for local businesses
Table of Contents
Small Business Saturday is your day. While Black Friday belongs to big-box retailers and Cyber Monday to e-commerce giants, the Saturday after Thanksgiving is specifically designed to celebrate and support local businesses like yours.
But here's the thing: with millions of businesses competing for attention, you need more than just a "Shop Local" sign in your window. Smart Small Business Saturday marketing starts weeks before the event and uses every channel available, including one most small businesses overlook: TV advertising.
Let's build your complete Small Business Saturday campaign.
The Small Business Saturday Opportunity
Small Business Saturday isn't a token gesture. It's a genuine economic force. In recent years, consumers have spent over $17 billion on Small Business Saturday, and that number keeps growing.
What makes this day different:
Consumers actively want to support local: Unlike other shopping days, people specifically seek out small businesses
Community pride peaks: Local shopping becomes a badge of honor
Discovery mindset: Shoppers explore businesses they've never visited
Holiday timing: Gift-buying season is in full swing
The challenge? Every small business in your area knows this. Standing out requires starting early and reaching people before they've made their plans.
Your Campaign Timeline
The most effective Small Business Saturday marketing campaigns follow a strategic timeline. Here's your week-by-week plan:
2 Weeks Before: Build Awareness
Goal: Get on people's radar before the shopping chaos begins.
Launch TV ads introducing your business to new audiences
Focus on your story, not promotions yet
Build familiarity so you're recognized when Saturday arrives
Messaging focus: "Meet [Your Business]" or "Your neighbors at [Your Business]"
1 Week Before: Promote Your Offers
Goal: Give people a specific reason to visit you.
Shift TV creative to highlight your Small Business Saturday specials
Create urgency with limited-time offers
Emphasize what makes you unique
Show specific products or services available
Messaging focus: "This Saturday only..." or "Small Business Saturday specials..."
Day Of: Full Activation
Goal: Capture attention and drive immediate traffic.
Continue TV ads for last-minute awareness
Add day-of social media posts
Email loyal customers with reminders
Make your store/location visually inviting
Week After: Thank You & Extend
Goal: Convert one-time visitors into repeat customers.
Thank customers who visited (social, email)
Extended offers for those who missed Saturday
Follow up with new customer contacts
Start building toward the next opportunity
TV Advertising for Small Business Saturday
TV advertising might seem like overkill for a single shopping day, but consider this: the biggest brands spend millions on Black Friday TV ads because they work. Now, with platforms like Adwave starting at $50, small businesses can play the same game.
Why TV Works for This Day
Reach: Your ad appears on the same screens as national retailers, on premium channels like NBC, Hulu, and ESPN.
Trust: 67% of consumers trust TV advertising more than social media ads. On a day about supporting trustworthy local businesses, that credibility matters.
Local targeting: Target your specific community. A bakery in Austin reaches Austin households, not people three states away.
Timing control: Run your ads during the weeks when shopping decisions are being made.
Sample TV Ad Approaches
The Origin Story: "Twenty years ago, we opened our doors on Main Street. This Small Business Saturday, we're celebrating our community with..."
The Team Introduction: "We're not a corporation. We're your neighbors: Sarah, Mike, and the team at [Business]. This Saturday, come see what makes us different."
The Exclusive Offer: "Small Business Saturday only: [specific deal]. Support local and save at [Business Name]."
The Community Impact: "Every dollar spent at [Business] stays in [City]. This Saturday, shop local, shop [Business]."
Creative Ideas for Your Campaign
Your Small Business Saturday marketing should feel authentic, not corporate. Here are ideas that work:
Tell Your Story
What makes your business special? The story of how you started, why you're passionate about what you do, or the community you've built, these resonate more than generic "shop local" messaging.
Show Your People
Feature yourself, your team, or even loyal customers (with permission). Faces build connection. Corporate anonymity is for corporations.
Offer Something Exclusive
Give people a specific reason to choose you on Saturday:
Limited edition products
One-day discounts
Free gift with purchase
Special experiences (demos, tastings, consultations)
Highlight Local Connection
Mention your neighborhood, your city, your community. "Your neighbors on [Street Name]" hits differently than generic small business messaging.
Multi-Channel Strategy
TV advertising works best as part of a coordinated campaign. Here's how the pieces fit together:
TV: Broad Awareness
Reaches households who don't follow you on social media and aren't on your email list. Plants the seed with new potential customers.
Social Media: Engagement & Reminders
Share behind-the-scenes content, countdown posts, sneak peeks of offers. Engage with people who already know you.
Email: Loyal Customer Activation
Your existing customers are your warmest audience. Remind them early, give them exclusive access or offers.
In-Store: Complete the Experience
Window displays, signage, staff preparation. When TV-driven visitors arrive, make sure the experience matches the promise.
Local Partnerships
Team up with neighboring businesses for cross-promotion. A restaurant and boutique promoting each other doubles reach for both.
Budget Allocation
Not sure how to split your Small Business Saturday marketing budget? Here's a framework:
If your total budget is $200-500:
TV advertising: $100-200 (2-week run)
Social media boost: $50-100
In-store materials: $50-100
Email (free with existing tools)
If your total budget is $500-1,000:
TV advertising: $300-500 (3-week run, higher frequency)
Social media: $100-200
Local partnerships/events: $100-200
Print/signage: $100
Remember: You don't need to do everything. A focused TV campaign alone can drive meaningful results, especially if you're reaching people who don't know you exist yet.
Measuring Success
How do you know if your Small Business Saturday campaign worked?
Immediate Metrics (Day Of)
Sales compared to last year's Saturday
Foot traffic/transaction count
New customer percentage
Social mentions and engagement
Short-Term Metrics (Week After)
"How did you hear about us?" responses
Website traffic during campaign period
Email signups from new customers
Brand search volume
Long-Term Metrics (Months After)
Repeat visits from Small Business Saturday customers
Overall customer base growth
Brand awareness lift in your community
Don't expect to perfectly attribute every sale to a specific ad. The goal is directional: did your overall results improve compared to doing nothing or doing less?
Get Ready for Small Business Saturday
Small Business Saturday is approaching. Here's your action checklist:
3+ Weeks Out:
[ ] Plan your offer/promotion
[ ] Create TV ad creative
[ ] Brief your team on the campaign
2 Weeks Out:
[ ] Launch awareness-focused TV ads
[ ] Schedule social media content
[ ] Prepare email announcements
1 Week Out:
[ ] Shift to promotion-focused TV creative
[ ] Send "mark your calendar" emails
[ ] Prepare in-store materials
Day Before:
[ ] Final team briefing
[ ] Social media reminders posted
[ ] Store/location ready
This is your day. While big retailers fight over Black Friday scraps, Small Business Saturday is built for businesses exactly like yours. The only question is whether you'll show up ready to compete.
Create your Small Business Saturday TV ad and make sure your community knows you're here. Starting at $50, there's no reason not to be part of the biggest day for local businesses.
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