Seasonal & Holidays

Small Business Saturday 2022: See Special Events, Deals In Vienna

Small Business Saturday is a chance to get some holiday shopping done while spending your dollars locally at Vienna businesses.

Support Vienna's small businesses during a pop-up market and promotions throughout the holiday season.
Support Vienna's small businesses during a pop-up market and promotions throughout the holiday season. (Emily Leayman/Patch)

VIENNA, VA — Saturday, Nov. 26, is an important day for independently owned local businesses in Vienna. It’s Small Business Saturday, the kickoff to “shop small” events that emphasize the power of dollars spent in local communities.

Small Business Saturday is sandwiched between the major Black Friday retail shopping holiday that tends to favor national brands and Cyber Monday, an online shopping event that this year takes place on Nov. 28.

One way to support small businesses will be the Town of Vienna Made Pop Up Market on Saturday, Nov. 26 and Sunday, Nov. 27 from noon to 4:30 p.m. at 123 Maple Avenue. Local artisans will be selling their handmade products, ranging from food and home gifts to body care products and art.

Find out what's happening in Viennafor free with the latest updates from Patch.

For ongoing holiday shopping, the Vienna Business Association has put together a guide of Vienna business promotions and special events during the holiday season.

Another option for locally-made products can be found in Visit Fairfax's 2022 Holiday Gift Guide. That includes a Made in Fairfax directory of local artisan-made products.

Find out what's happening in Viennafor free with the latest updates from Patch.

For more small business suggestions, American Express has a directory of small businesses in Vienna to shop small this holiday season.

For many without the scale of established national chains to cruise through COVID-19 pandemic disruptions, fourth-quarter sales could make the difference between hanging on or shuttering their shops.

Last year, Small Business Saturday sales topped $23 billion. Since the first Small Business Saturday in 2010, consumers have spent an estimated $163 billion, according to American Express, the longtime sponsor of the event.

According to a Small Business Administration report, Virginia had 783,977 small businesses in 2021. The 1.6 million employees accounted for nearly half of Virginia's employees.

Two-thirds of every dollar spent at a local business remains in the community, according to most estimates. There’s a little more to the so-called “local multiplier effect,” according to the American Independent Business Alliance.

A study from that group found that, on average, 48 percent of every purchase at a local independent business is recirculated locally, compared to less than 14 percent of purchases at chain stores.

Small businesses are typically defined by the federal government as those with 500 to 1,500 employees, depending on the industry. They are responsible for two of every three jobs over the past 25 years, according to the Labor Department. Even a partial collapse of small businesses could weaken the overall U.S. economy.

Americans seem to understand how high the stakes are for small businesses.

Almost four out of five (79 percent) said small businesses are essential in their communities, according to a new survey of 1,000 adults conducted by Teneo on behalf of Kabbage by American Express.

The last couple of years have been tough as business owners bent their business models to navigate the pandemic, but many now question whether they’ll be able to continue.

Nearly one-fourth (24 percent) of businesses surveyed in the Kabbage by American Express survey said holiday sales volume will determine if they survive into 2023.

Another measure of merchants’ worries: National Federation of Independent Business members gave their lowest economic expectations ever in a June survey.

Driving their worries are hot inflation they fear will keep customers away and supply chain challenges that could make it difficult to stock the items consumers want, according to the latest MetLife & U.S. Chamber of Commerce Small Business Index. Among specific findings:

  • 50 percent of small businesses say inflation is a top challenge, an increase of 31 percentage points from Q3 2021;
  • 71 percent of small businesses think that when it comes to inflation and price increases, the worst is yet to come;
  • 31 percent of small business owners say their local economy is in good health, down 6 percentage points this quarter.

Small businesses are employing new strategies from inventory management to investment in marketing and payment transaction tools, but they’re also increasingly relying on credit, according to the Kabbage by American Express survey.

Some 21 percent of small business owners in the U.S. planned to take out a small business loan this holiday season. Almost a third (32 percent) planned to use the loan to cover costs to support their business, from inventory bills to common cash flow gaps.

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