You’ve heard of shrinkflation, when brands make their products smaller, often undetectably so, and charge the same price. You may also have heard of skimpflation, when products remain the same size but are made with cheaper ingredients. Here’s a new one: spaving, a merging of “spending” and “saving” where consumers are enticed—you’re $9.37 away from free shipping!—to save more by spending more.
Like those other portmanteaus, it’s a strategy that many retailers are executing but which personal finance experts are cautioning consumers about.
Term on a dime: If it seems like the term came out of nowhere, it’s because it kind of did. Google searches for “spaving” were virtually nonexistent over the last five years, then spiked on the week of May 5–11, according to Google trends.
In the 30 days ending June 30, there were 693 mentions of “spaving” on social media, an astonishing 34,550% increase over the previous 30 days, when there were just two, according to Hootsuite data compiled exclusively for Retail Brew.
During that same period, the three posts about spaving that earned the most engagement all were on YouTube, with CNBC topping the list, followed by The Millionaire Morning Show with Anton Daniels (which posted about spaving twice), and The Ramsey Show, per Hootsuite.
While the coinage may be new, many practices spaving encompasses are as old as the—ka-ching!—cash register.
Keep reading here.—AAN
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