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Promotions, Bundles and Margin Leakage

Avoid training customers to wait for discounts — the margin arithmetic, the bundle thesis and the promotional discipline that separates healthy growth from a race to the bottom.

Article 06  ·  7 min read    Written by Ascendant eCommerce Team

Volume uplift required to stand still

on a sale that previously made 20% EBITDA

The math
0% +100% +200% +300% 0% 5% 10% 15% 20% PRICE DISCOUNT +33% +100% +300% UNITS NEEDED
At 20% off contribution hits zero → ∞
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Key Takeaways

Why this matters

Discounts erode margin silently.

A 20% price cut on a 20% EBITDA product requires infinite additional volume just to break even.

The thesis

Bundles earn more per order.

Mix shift and perceived value — not price cuts — are how operators grow order value without destroying margin.

Use it with intent

Promotion cadence trains behaviour.

Frequent sales teach customers to wait. Discipline in promotional timing protects full-price demand.

1 Why this matters

How eCommerce Brands Quietly Set Fire to Profit

Discounts are margin decisions before they are marketing tactics. The best eCommerce brands use promotions deliberately, often through bundles or cash-recovery stock clearance, and avoid training customers to wait for discounts.

    RELATED GUIDE:Brand-Led vs Smash-and-Grab eCommerce— How brand strategy protects your margin long-term
    2 The thesis

    Promotions, Bundles and Margin Leakage

    Promotions are easy to launch and hard to unwind. That is why they deserve more respect than they usually get.

    A price cut changes more than the checkout conversion rate. It changes contribution, cash generation, customer expectations and often the operational stress inside the business. Founders frequently underestimate the volume uplift required just to stand still after a discount. A small headline reduction can demand a surprisingly large increase in units simply to make the same absolute money.

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    3 Use it with intent

    That is why discounting should have a purpose

    If the goal is to clear dead stock and release trapped cash, discounting can be sensible. If the goal is to increase basket size through bundling, it can also be sensible. But if the goal is merely to create noise or chase vanity revenue, it is usually expensive theatre.

    Indiscriminate sitewide promotions so often leave brands looking busy and feeling poor.

    A founder who cuts price by 20% often imagines that a modest uplift in orders will protect profitability. In reality, the required uplift can be startlingly large. Once you map the discount through to cash generation rather than just revenue, it becomes obvious why indiscriminate sitewide promotions so often leave brands looking busy and feeling poor.

    The healthier alternative is often bundling, threshold offers or selective stock-clearance logic. Those approaches can raise AOV, protect unit economics or release trapped cash without teaching the customer that your normal price is optional.

    Black Friday is the classic cautionary tale. A business can look incredibly busy while quietly giving away too much margin, pulling sales forward and creating stock or fulfilment stress that hurts the rest of the season.

    The better approach is to treat promotions as a deliberate commercial trade: what are we giving up, what are we getting back, and does the trade actually improve the business?

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eCommerce accounting — common questions

4 questions · click to expand

01How much extra volume do I actually need after a 20% discount?+×

More than founders usually expect. A 20% headline discount on a sale that previously made 20% EBITDA takes the price from £100 to £80 and effectively wipes out the cash profit on that order. To make the same £20 of total cash profit you were making before, volume often has to rise dramatically — not modestly. The right discount question is never “how much off?” but “how many more units do we need to sell to stand still, and is that realistic?”

02When is discounting actually a good idea?+×

Discounting is sensible when it has a clear commercial purpose. The two strongest cases are clearing dead stock to release trapped cash, and increasing basket size through bundling or threshold offers. Selective stock-clearance logic also works because it targets specific SKUs rather than the whole catalogue. What rarely works is sitewide, indiscriminate discounting designed to create noise or chase vanity revenue — that is usually expensive theatre.

03Why are bundles a healthier alternative to sitewide promotions?+×

Bundles raise average order value and protect unit economics rather than eroding them. They give the customer a reason to spend more in one transaction without teaching them that your normal price is optional. Threshold offers (“spend £X, get Y”) work in a similar way — they reward larger baskets instead of paying every customer to do what they were already going to do. Bundling also lets you mix slower-moving stock with hero SKUs, which helps with inventory health at the same time.

04What is the real cost of Black Friday for an eCommerce brand?+×

Black Friday is the classic cautionary tale. A business can look incredibly busy while quietly giving away too much margin, pulling sales forward from December and January, and creating stock or fulfilment stress that hurts the rest of the season. The headline revenue number looks great; the contribution, cash generation and operational picture often look much worse. Treat it as a deliberate commercial trade rather than a marketing reflex: what are we giving up, what are we getting back, and does the trade actually improve the business?