Holiday 2025 Playbook for Canadian Marketers

As the holiday season approaches, Canadian marketers face a high-stakes challenge. Holiday timelines are shorter, budgets are tighter, and audiences are harder to impress. Expectations continue to rise, even as attention spans shrink. But 2025 brings a new twist. According to Google Canada, this will be the country’s first AI-powered holiday season, one shaped as much by algorithms as by tradition.

This year, success will not come from louder campaigns. It will come from sharper planning, earlier execution, and smarter use of AI and local insight. Here is our Canadian-built playbook rooted in actionable strategy and real-world trends.

1. Think Season-Long and Into Q5

Canadian shoppers are starting earlier and spending longer. A linear campaign that peaks during Cyber Weekend is no longer enough. Google reports that 64 percent of Gen Z shoppers use 10 or more resources to research gifts. Discovery begins in October, and value-seeking continues into January.

What to do:

  • Launch brand storytelling and gift discovery tools by mid-October

  • Shift performance peaks to late November through December 24

  • Build a Q5 plan for January 1 to 15 focused on loyalty, upsell, and redemption

  • Reserve budget for soft-Cost-per-Mille (CPM) remarketing in early January

Why it matters:
As noted by IAB Canada’s 2025 Holiday Checklist, media engagement remains high in early January while ad costs drop. Treating the season as a full-quarter arc unlocks incremental value.

2. Connect Online and In-Store Moments

Hybrid retail is the new standard. According to IAB Canada, 84 percent of holiday purchases still happen in-store, but most begin with digital research. Consumers expect cohesion, from their phone screen to the checkout counter.

What to do:

  • Sync ecommerce offers with in-store signage and shelf tags

  • Use QR codes or NFC to link shoppers to bundles, reviews, or wishlists

  • Include local inventory data in search and Shopping ads

  • Align your paid media with regional in-store availability

Why it matters:
When discovery starts digitally, but conversion ends in store, disconnected messaging can cost sales. Shoppers reward brands that help them move seamlessly between platforms and touchpoints.

3. Win Intent-Driven Discovery on Social

Social platforms are no longer just for browsing. Increasingly, they’re where Canadians plan, research, and shop for the holidays. This is especially true for Gen Z and millennial consumers.

What to do:

  • Build content with searchable keywords on TikTok, Pinterest, and Instagram

  • Launch campaign assets that are both inspirational and shoppable

  • Test paid media formats like Pinterest shopping ads, Instagram product tags, and YouTube Shorts

  • Feature creators who show products in use, not just polished ads

Why it matters:
Google Lens now sees more than 25 billion visual searches per month, with one in four carrying commercial intent. The line between inspiration and action has disappeared.

More on Platforms with Intention:
In a SocialNext Marketing Alliance session, Pinterest Canada revealed that shoppable Pins are being used earlier than ever for purchase planning. Brands that launch keyworded boards by mid-November improve discoverability and conversion. Members can stream the full replay in the Webinar Archive.

4. Personalization That Feels Human

Automation is essential, but emotional intelligence is what differentiates. The best personalization blends predictive insight with human warmth.

What to do:

  • Segment by behaviour, not just demographics

  • Use AI to power complementary offers, bundles, or nudges

  • Personalize with empathy: “Exploring hiking boots? Here’s 20 percent off warm socks.”

  • Deliver dynamic content timed to browsing, not just calendar triggers

Why it matters:
According to Microsoft’s 2025 Canadian Retail Trends, 59 percent of Canadians prefer sustainable gift options and 61 percent are willing to pay more for them. Personalization must go beyond names to intent, values, and context.

5. Let Audiences Co-Create the Campaign

Top-down storytelling is being replaced by participatory campaigns. Canadians are more likely to remember and act on campaigns they help shape.

What to do:

  • Launch nomination or voting activations tied to community causes

  • Measure engagement through hashtag activity, entries, or shared stories

  • Empower local teams to share content from their regions

Canadian example:
CBC’s annual "Make the Season Kind" campaign continues to demonstrate how community-led storytelling can unify regional efforts into a national impact story, raising $7.8 million across 24 stations in 2024. The model converted participation into measurable social impact.

6. Reflect Canada, Not Generic “Holiday”

Canadians reject one-size-fits-all holiday creative. Campaigns resonate more when they reflect regional diversity and cultural nuance.

What to do:

  • Spotlight makers from different provinces and communities

  • Build creative in multiple languages and tones

  • Showcase seasonal moments beyond snow globes, from coastal celebrations to prairie frost

Why it matters:
Surface-level inclusion is no longer acceptable. Representation must be integrated from concept to execution to build trust.

7. Highlight Imperfection and Relatable Chaos

Perfection fatigue is real. The brands that win lean into humour, self-awareness, and the messiness of the holidays.

What to do:

  • Embrace creative imperfection: burnt cookies, tangled lights, forgotten gifts

  • Use playful, conversational tone in ads and email subject lines

  • Feature employees or customers in low-fi, authentic content

Canadian example:
CBC’s campaign succeeded because it prioritized warmth and local imperfection over cinematic polish. The message landed because it felt real.

8. Build Measurement and Incrementality In

Marketers are expected to prove value, not just visibility. Impressions alone do not move the needle.

What to do:

  • Plan campaign lift studies and use holdout groups

  • Integrate Google conversion APIs, especially for cross-device tracking

  • Assign channel-specific KPIs from day one:

    • CTV: completion and household frequency

    • Retail media: foot traffic and ROAS

    • Social: engagement-to-purchase ratios

Why it matters:
Agile measurement enables mid-flight optimization. Impressions alone are no longer enough. Marketers must measure what is working in real time, not just what worked in hindsight.

9. Extend the Holiday Into Loyalty and Retention

The real value of Q4 campaigns is in Q1 retention. Treat post-holiday engagement as a continuation, not a wrap-up.

What to do:

  • Send follow-ups like “You gifted X — want to complete the set?”

  • Offer January perks, sneak peeks, or early-access promos

  • Turn holiday user-generated content into January recap stories

  • Funnel Q4 shoppers into loyalty programs within 72 hours of purchase

10. Drive Redemption, Not Just Points Accrual

Canadians hold billions in unused loyalty points. Redemption-focused campaigns can drive post-holiday revenue and deepen engagement.

What to do:

  • Partner with loyalty programs like Scene+, PC Optimum, and Aeroplan

  • Promote redemption-based offers: “Redeem 2,000 points for free wrapping supplies”

  • Build creative around treating yourself, not just gifting others

  • Use post-holiday email to prompt leftover point usage

Why it matters:
Bond’s 2025 Loyalty Report found that 70 percent of Canadians prefer shopping with loyalty-integrated brands, but 43 percent say redemption is confusing or overlooked.

Smart Retailer AI Checklist (from Google Canada)

  1. Set clear business goals before the season

  2. Be present early and stay visible throughout

  3. Make online-to-store journeys seamless

  4. Optimize product content for AI and visual discovery

  5. Use YouTube and creators to inspire purchase confidence

Source: Google Canada’s 2025 Holiday Retail Insights

Final Takeaways

This holiday season, success belongs to brands that combine precision with empathy, AI with authenticity, and national strategy with local execution.

  • Warmth needs structure: emotion must be backed by timing and testing

  • Local wins: regional stories and community-driven content deepen connection

  • Participation beats polish: Canadians value realness over perfection

  • AI adds value when humanized: let it guide relevance, not replace relationships

  • Measure what matters: focus on incremental lift and retention, not just traffic

If it feels real, timely, and Canadian, it works.


Want more insights like these?
SNMA members get access to exclusive sessions, replays, and strategy drops like the Pinterest Canada holiday deep dive. Learn more or join at snma.circle.so

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This Week in Canadian Marketing – October 3, 2025