Navigation
Search
|
Black Friday 2024: How to get the best prices on tech, and where to shop
Friday November 15, 2024. 07:00 PM , from PC World
Black Friday once was a single, frantic day of shopping. Back then, you’d wake up at the crack of dawn the day after Thanksgiving, drive to a mall, and fight over CDs, televisions, and computers. People with sharp eyes and quick reflexes would snag incredible deep discounts amid piles of questionable “bargains.”
Later on, online retailers launched Cyber Monday as a digital version of the free-for-all, with an eventual melding of Black Friday and Cyber Monday to first take over the whole Thanksgiving weekend, then eventually the entire month of November. Recently, deals sometimes even started in October. This year’s a bit more quiet, though—which puts even more emphasis on knowing the best time to buy. Jump too soon, and you’ll pay more than you need. Hold out too long, and you might miss the top sale items. Not to worry, though. If you follow our tips below, deal hunting should be simpler and easier. When is Black Friday this year? Black Friday is always the fourth Friday of November—the day after Thanksgiving. For 2024, that comes at the very end of the month, on November 29. Cyber Monday will follow on December 2. However, stores don’t limit themselves to just these calendar dates anymore. You can already start discount shopping now. How to get the best Black Friday tech deals Option 1: Let us do the work The easiest way to score rock-bottom prices is to let us find them for you. We’ve already begun tracking deals—and some of them are quite good. The 29 best Amazon Black Friday tech deals our experts found Best Buy’s best Black Friday tech deals Best Black Friday desktop computer deals Best Black Friday laptop deals Best Black Friday monitor deals Best Black Friday USB flash drive deals Best Black Friday SSD and storage deals Best Black Friday VPN deals Best Black Friday Chromebook deals Best Black Friday power bank deals Best Black Friday office chair and desk deals Best Black Friday Thunderbolt dock deals Option 2: Wade into the fray with our help The other option is to strike out on your own. It’s simple if you’re prepared—you just need to set aside time for it. Even then, you can zip pretty fast through all websites, circulars, forum posts, and email newsletters if you follow these tips. Make a plan (and a budget) Listing your potential purchases helps in knowing when to pull the trigger on a deal—and for keeping track of all the packages that come in. PCWorld To actually save money, you need to make a plan—otherwise the temptation to blow cash on more stuff can become too great. Whether in your head or written out, decide on what to shop for, your desired prices, and the max you’re willing to pay. This list will look different for everyone. My preferred prices usually involve a hefty discount, and my max usually isn’t too much higher. I also keep tabs on products I use regularly, so that I know what to stock up on, what I might need to replace soon, and the stuff I’ve considered buying if deeply discounted. Bargain hunting doesn’t always go predictably, of course. Some years you’ll nab every major thing on your list. Other years, you’ll find a deal on just a few things, but also unexpectedly score five stackable one-year Microsoft Office 365 licenses for $15 each. (I still hope to see a repeat deal someday.) But a plan ensures you’ll know exactly what to watch for and when to zero in. Research prices in advance Keepa is a site that shows detailed historical price data for products sold on Amazon. Camelcamelcamel is another popular alternative. PCWorld Not all deals that happen during Black Friday are good. Many discounts are mediocre and designed to lure you into spending money. Doing research on the products you want to buy can save you some serious cash, whether or not you make a spending plan. A few different sites can help provide the background knowledge you’ll need: Keepa.com or Camelcamelcamel.com: These sites show historical price information for products on Amazon. And because there’s also a graph showing the trend over time, you can tell how often a product goes on sale, what the most common sale prices are, and what the lowest price was. BlackFriday.com: More retailers have begun releasing their circulars early, but for those who haven’t, sites like BlackFriday.com publish scans of leaked Black Friday ads for major retailers (Best Buy, Target, Newegg, Fry’s, Micro Center, etc.). While none of these prices are guaranteed, these scans provide early reconnaissance on which retailers will have which products on sale, and roughly what the cost will be. Slickdeals.net: This set of forums crowdsources deal-hunting. Frontpage deals are supposed to be the absolute crème de la crème of the bunch, while a fire hose of daily deals lives in the Hot Deals forum. Search for a product name or model number to see any posts related to it. Not all products will have results (or relevant results), but often you can find the last best price on a product and when that was. Keep your search term as simple as possible (just one or two keywords specific to the item) to improve your results. If you plan to take advantage of Amazon’s Lightning deals, which don’t reveal the sale price until the deal starts, doing this research in advance is particularly useful. When a Lightning deal goes live, you’ll know immediately if it’s worth your time. Set deal alerts on Slickdeals and Amazon Using Slickdeals’ alert feature can help you catch deals that you might otherwise miss—and help you understand price trends. Shown here is a historical snapshot from several years ago. If you sign up for a free account on Slickdeals, you can set up to 200 different deal alerts that can ping you via email, the Slickdeals mobile app, private message through the site, and/or desktop browser notifications. (You’ll receive a notice whenever a member posts a deal that matches your keywords.) These alerts can be customized based on popularity and forum. Amazon offers a similar service for its Lightning deals, which are available for only a limited time on the site. (They expire at a certain time or when the allotted inventory runs out, whichever comes first.) If you use the Amazon app on your phone or tablet, you can get alerts when the deal starts by “watching” the deal. You can also set deal alerts through Keepa.com and Camelcamelcamel.com for Amazon deals, but they don’t always get sent in time to act on the deal. Still, setting them up doesn’t hurt. Sign up for email newsletters at specific stores Email newsletters can be a good source of deals, for a few reasons. Some deals are only available if you’re already on the store’s email list. For example, Newegg, often creates coupon codes that only work for email subscribers. Signing up for a store’s email newsletter can alert you to hot sales. PCWorld Other sites offer codes for discounts and free shipping through their email newsletters that don’t always show up on deal and coupon sites. Then there are the places with niche items that rarely go on sale (like Apple products). Even if the product still stays at normal price during Black Friday, some vendors will at least provide a gift with purchase. Note: If inbox clutter is a concern, you can use either a filter or a junk email address to collect all the email in one spot. You usually don’t need to use the same email address at checkout for the code to work. Keep an eye out for bundle deals Micro Center often has CPU/motherboard bundle discounts. When combined with their insanely low in-store prices during Black Friday, you can save some serious cash. PCWorld Shopping for PC parts? Pay attention to the retailers that favor bundle and combo deals. That’s typically Newegg and Micro Center, but on occasion other stores offer them as well. You can save quite a bit this way—for example, Micro Center often offers a combo discount for buying a CPU and a motherboard at the same time. That’s in addition to already-reduced prices on both components. (You can see how we made the most of these deals in our Cheapest Black Friday / Cyber Monday PC Build articles from 2023, 2022, 2021, 2020, 2019, 2018, 2017, and 2016.) Where to find good Black Friday tech deals Curious to know which stores we frequent the most? These are the places we make our own personal purchases at: Amazon Best Buy Newegg B&H Micro Center Target Walmart Costco / Sam’s Club GameStop eBay* We also shop directly on the manufacturers’ websites as well: Dell, Microsoft, HP, Apple, Google, etc. (*We buy from established retailers with eBay storefronts, like Adorama and Best Buy) How to get free shipping during Black Friday Most big-box retailers offer free shipping for orders over a certain threshold or free in-store pickup. PCWorld These days, free shipping is common—and occasionally, next-day and two-day shipping are even dangled as an incentive. You should still expect to see free standard shipping (usually for orders over $35) and free curbside pick-up for purchases made at major retailers, as applicable. We recommend signing up for newsletters now, so that you’ll get notified of any free shipping promotions between now and the end of December. You can unsubscribe after you’re done with your shopping. How to price match Black Friday purchases For price matching, you’ll need to look up each store’s policy. Typically, price matching is rare, especially during Black Friday sales. However, one novel variation is Newegg’s price protection program, which has returned for a fifth year. If you purchase an eligible item between November 1 through November 20 and it drops in price on or before November 30, you’ll be automatically refunded the difference. How to return Black Friday purchases Return policies vary across stores, but most U.S. retailers extend their windows for returns and exchanges for items purchased in November and most of December. Be sure to read the return policy for each site you shop at. Also, before making a purchase, check to see if it’s easy to return the item and if it will cost you anything (like a restocking fee or shipping). If you’re not careful, you could lose money on the purchase should you end up not needing it. Our picks for Black Friday deals We’re beginning to roll out our curated lists for Black Friday tech deals—and you can expect them to stay fresh with the best deals throughout the month. Here’s to hoping for a year of deep discounts! Black Friday monitor deals: What to expect and early sales Black Friday laptop deals: What to expect and early sales Black Friday SSD deals: What to expect and early sales Black Friday desktop PC deals: What to expect and early sales Black Friday Chromebook deals: What to expect and early sales Black Friday Thunderbolt dock deals: What to expect and early sales Black Friday power bank deals: What to expect and early sales
https://www.pcworld.com/article/402850/black-friday-everything-you-need-to-know.html
Related News |
25 sources
Current Date
Dec, Wed 18 - 19:47 CET
|