Black Friday sales soared on portable devices.
Investing in better apps and mobile shopping sites paid off for retailers this year, IBM said Saturday, and digital sales were up 21.5% from last year.
Another report from Adobe said Americans spent more than $2.7 billion online Friday. That’s a 14.3% increase from last year based on Adobe’s tracking methods.
Both companies said shoppers filled their virtual shopping carts on their smartphones and tablets more than laptop and desktop computers.
“US consumers have turned into digital shopping ninjas,” Adobe analyst Tamara Gaffney said.
Adobe also said that online spending on Thursday and Friday totaled a record $4.47 billion.
IBM said smartphones were the device-of-choice for browsing deals and accounted for nearly 45% of total traffic. But on average, tablet shoppers spent more.
Tablet orders averaged $136, more than desktop, laptop or smartphone orders.
As for brick-and-mortar stores, ShopperTrak said sales may have declined from 2014. It estimated in-store shoppers spent about $12.1 billion over the two-day period, which would mark a decline from last year.
ShopperTrak executive Kevin Kearns said that doesn’t mean Black Friday was a bust for retailers.
“This year, we saw Black Friday ads emerge before Halloween,” he said, and in-store sales were bigger in the days leading up to Black Friday, “which is a result of retailers successfully elongating the holiday season.”
Kearns added that crowds were thinner this year, especially on Thanksgiving Day, due to “backlash against store openings on the holiday.”
ShopperTrak still expects this year’s overall holiday season to net more for retailers than last year.