A Sale Is Not a Strategy
Most business owners know the feeling.
The phone gets quiet. Appointments slow down. Sales dip. The calendar has too much empty space.
At first, you tell yourself it’s temporary. A slow week. A weird month. A seasonal dip. Then another day passes, and another, and the discomfort starts to build.
So you look for something to do.
That’s usually when someone says it.
“Maybe we should run a sale.”
And honestly, I understand the impulse. When business slows down, doing something feels better than waiting. A discount feels active. A coupon feels like movement. A promotion feels like a plan.
But a sale is not a strategy.
It might be part of one. It might support one. In the right situation, it might even be the exact right move.
But by itself, a sale does not explain why business slowed down. It does not tell you what changed. It does not show you whether the problem is visibility, messaging, trust, timing, competition, follow-up, or something else entirely.
It only changes the price.
That’s where many businesses get into trouble.
The Emotional Reaction
When things slow down, the first reaction is often emotional. Not irrational, exactly. Human.
A business owner has bills to pay. Employees to support. Inventory to move. Rooms to fill. Appointments to book. It is not easy to calmly analyze the situation when the bank account is staring back at you with its cold, judgmental little face.
So the brain wants relief.
A sale offers relief because it feels like control. It gives you something to post, something to email, something to announce. It creates the appearance of action at a time when sitting still feels impossible.
But emotional action and strategic action are not the same thing.
The sale is not always the problem.
The emotional reaction is.
What Are You Actually Solving?
Before offering a discount, the better question is simple:
What problem are we trying to solve?
If the problem is excess inventory, a sale might make perfect sense. If the problem is a seasonal slowdown that happens every year, a planned promotion may be useful. If the goal is to introduce a new product, reward loyal customers, or create a specific short-term push, a sale can fit inside a larger plan.
But if the problem is that fewer people are calling, fewer people are booking, or fewer people are finding you online, a discount may not solve anything.
If people don’t know you exist, a coupon doesn’t fix that.
If your message is unclear, a discount doesn’t fix that.
If your website isn’t helping people understand what you do, a promotion doesn’t fix that.
If your follow-up process is weak, lowering the price doesn’t fix that either.
You may get a little movement. You may not. But either way, you still haven’t diagnosed the real issue.
Lack of Systems Creates Panic
This is where systems matter.
Not complicated systems. Not corporate binders full of color-coded nonsense no one opens after the first meeting.
Just simple ways to evaluate what is happening before reacting to it.
When a business has no system for reviewing slow periods, every dip feels like an emergency. There is no baseline. No pattern to compare against. No clear understanding of what usually happens this time of year. No process for checking visibility, leads, calls, search activity, follow-up, or past results.
So the decision becomes emotional.
Calls are down, so run a sale.
Appointments are light, so offer a discount.
Engagement is low, so post louder.
Revenue is soft, so try something dramatic.
That might feel productive in the moment, but it can create a habit of reacting instead of understanding.
And over time, that habit gets expensive.
What Customers Learn
Businesses often think of sales from their own perspective.
“We need more calls.”
“We need more appointments.”
“We need more orders this week.”
But customers learn from patterns.
I shop online. We all do. There are things we need immediately, things we want immediately, and things that can wait. If a company runs a sale once or twice a year, it may feel like a real opportunity. But if that same company runs a sale every few weeks, I start to behave differently.
I don’t rush.
I wait.
Because I know another sale is coming.
That is the part businesses sometimes miss. Repeated promotions may be intended to create urgency, but they often train customers to be patient. The sale stops feeling special. The “limited time” message stops feeling believable. Eventually, the discounted price becomes the only price the customer takes seriously.
That may work in some retail environments. Grocery stores rotate sales constantly, and shoppers learn the rhythm. Clothing, home goods, and online retailers often build discount cycles into their business model.
But service businesses are different.
When an accountant, electrician, chiropractor, web developer, farrier, or plumber starts discounting services repeatedly, the message can get muddy. What exactly is flexible? The time? The expertise? The quality of the work? The value of the result?
Whether fair or not, customers may begin to believe the price is negotiable because the business has taught them that it is.
When Promotions Don’t Work
Another reason to slow down before running a sale is simple:
Has this worked before?
It sounds obvious, but many businesses repeat the same promotion because it feels familiar, not because it produced results.
If a previous discount did not bring in more business, the next question should not be, “What discount should we run now?”
It should be, “Why didn’t that work?”
Maybe the offer wasn’t compelling. Maybe the audience wasn’t right. Maybe the timing was wrong. Maybe the real issue had nothing to do with price at all.
If people didn’t respond when the service was discounted before, there is a good chance price was not the main obstacle.
That matters.
Because if price is not the problem, a lower price is not the solution.
A Sale Can Support a Strategy
None of this means businesses should never run promotions.
Sales can be useful. Discounts can be appropriate. Special offers can work well when they are planned, intentional, and tied to a specific goal.
The difference is whether the promotion is serving a strategy or replacing one.
A planned promotion might answer questions like:
Who is this for?
Why now?
What do we expect to happen?
How will we measure whether it worked?
What happens after someone responds?
Those questions matter because a promotion should not exist in isolation. It should connect to the larger picture of the business.
Otherwise, it becomes a reaction.
And reactions are expensive.
Before You Make the Coupon
When business slows down, pause before reaching for a discount.
Look at what is actually happening. Check the patterns. Look at visibility. Look at messaging. Look at timing. Look at follow-up. Look at the outside factors. Look at whether people even understand what you offer and why it matters.
Then decide.
Maybe a promotion makes sense.
Maybe it doesn’t.
But either way, the decision should come from understanding, not panic.
A sale can support a strategy.
It cannot replace one.
Don’t make up a coupon until you know the truth.