Business & Tech

Small Business Saturday 2019: Where To Shop In Brooklyn

Small Business Saturday — it's on Nov. 30 this year — helps local businesses in Brooklyn compete.

Small Business Saturday — it’s on Nov. 30 this year — helps local businesses in Brooklyn compete.
Small Business Saturday — it’s on Nov. 30 this year — helps local businesses in Brooklyn compete. (Business Wire)

BROOKLYN, NY — Independently owned shops in Brooklyn are participating in Small Business Saturday, established a decade ago to help them compete against malls, big box stores and online retailers during the holiday shopping season.

Small Business Saturday, held annually on the Saturday after Thanksgiving, was created to give them a boost and help level the field of competition. This year, the 10th anniversary of the “Shop Small” movement, the all-local shopping event falls on Nov. 30.

In Brooklyn, there are thousands of businesses participating, many of which will offer sales and discounts throughout the day. You can find maps of businesses that are participating by neighborhood or merchant name here.

Find out what's happening in Brooklynwith free, real-time updates from Patch.

Some hotspots throughout the borough will be hosting their own "Shop Small" events, including tree lightings, small business pop-ups and specific promotions for some of Brooklyn's biggest commercial corridors.

Here's a look at what to check out:

Find out what's happening in Brooklynwith free, real-time updates from Patch.

  • Park Slope's Fifth Avenue Business Improvement District will host New York City's first holiday tree lighting at its "Shop Small" celebration on Fifth Avenue, the tree lighting is set for 6 p.m. on the corner of Fifth Avenue and Fourth Street.
  • The Myrtle Avenue Brooklyn Partnership will have a tent set up from 12 to 3 p.m. on the corner of Myrtle and Clinton avenues, where they will be giving away #ShopSmall tote bags and swag, access day-of deals at local businesses and entries to a $200 Myrtle Shopping Spree contest.
  • Montague Street in Brooklyn Heights will also have a set-up at the Bossert Hotel lobby where shoppers can bring a receipt from any purchase, or an unused, unwrapped toy, to take an selfie with an elf, get free swag or balloon art.
  • The Grand Street BID in Williamsburg will have a pop-up table at 711 Grand Street from 12 p.m. to 2 p.m. with promotional materials and a prize wheel with a raffle for a merchandise prize from Forum.
  • The Flatbush Avenue BID will also celebrate Small Business Saturday throughout the corridor.
  • A few weeks after Small Business Saturday will be "Black Owned Small Business Saturday BK"at Saint Bartholomew's Apostle Church. This event will be from 12 to 5 p.m. on Saturday, Dec. 14.

Some Brooklyn businesses were also included in American Express' New York City guide of the best hotspots to check out, though the guide seemed to only list those closest to Manhattan. All of Brooklyn's spots on the guide are found in Williamsburg and Greenpoint.

Did we miss an event in Brooklyn? Tell us in the comments or send an email to [email protected] and we'll add it to the list.

American Express established Small Business Saturday in 2010 to help local businesses reeling from the Great Recession. The U.S. Senate passed a resolution a year later encouraging businesses in all 50 states to participate in what has morphed into a nationwide “shop small” movement.

This year, the stakes are even higher for small businesses. Rising rents and shifting consumer behavior are causing many small business owners to shutter their shops, according to American Express.

A Shop Small Consumer Impact survey from American Express found that 73 percent of people think empty storefronts are a national issue, and 84 percent agree the increase in empty storefronts and the closing of small, independently owned businesses negatively affects their local communities.

“We recognize the hardships faced by small business owners today and want to inspire people to take notice and Shop Small to support their communities on Small Business Saturday and beyond,” Elizabeth Rutledge, chief marketing officer at American Express, said in a news release. “Retail is changing, but local shops are the fabric of our communities, helping them to thrive in the future is part of our brand ethos and backing promise.”

Since 2010, local business supporters have spent $103 billion on Small Business Saturday, according to American Express.

But that’s only part of the story. For every dollar spent at a U.S. small business, approximately 67 cents stays in the local community — and it helps independent shops and restaurants keep their doors open and pay their workers.

That amounts to about $67 billion that has stayed in local communities since Small Business Saturday began, according to American Express.

The American Express survey showed that when consumers are aware of the impact of spending their dollars locally, 75 percent said they would be more likely to purchase a product or service from small, independently owned businesses.

Shopping small isn’t just a Thanksgiving weekend retail event, but a year-long movement, according to American Express, which says it is launching a marketing campaign to make consumers more aware of the impact they can have on their communities when they support local businesses.

“We believe in backing small businesses because we know they strengthen the communities where we live and work,” Anna Marrs, president of Global Commercial Services at American Express, said in the news release.


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