

Peak season results are shaped before traffic spikes. Use this 30-day checklist to make sure your Snap setup, site messaging, team training, and reporting are ready before your busiest selling window begins.
Peak readiness is a checklist, not a campaign. The four weeks before a major sales window should be used to confirm setup, creative, training, reporting, and support coverage.
Merchants should make Snap visible across the full customer journey, including product detail pages, landing pages, email templates, ads, in-store signage, sales scripts, and customer service responses.
Daily reporting helps teams spot issues quickly during peak. Traffic, financing application starts, approval rate, and AOV should be reviewed consistently throughout the window.
Peak season is won in the unglamorous prep work: the login checks, message tweaks, staff refreshers, and reporting setup that happen before traffic ever spikes.
For Snap Finance merchants, the difference between a strong peak season and a stressful one is rarely one big campaign. It is usually a series of small operational details, such as portal access that works, product pages that mention financing clearly, associates who know what to say, and reporting that shows what is happening before sales leaders have to guess.
That matters because many shoppers still face barriers to traditional financing. According to Snap Finance’s 2025 research, 78% of consumers with credit scores below 670 have been turned down for financing.
Peak readiness is a checklist, not a campaign. The merchants who treat the four weeks before peak as setup time, not selling time, are better positioned to scale during the window.
Start with the systems that make everything else possible.
Verify that primary and backup users can access the Merchant Portal. If logins are stale, reset them now instead of waiting until traffic rises.
This is also the time to confirm who owns daily activity checks, reporting exports, application questions, and internal escalations. A strong setup includes more than one person who knows where to find what the team needs.
Confirm that the approval amount ranges displayed on your site, in stores, and in customer-facing materials match current Snap messaging. Outdated financing language creates avoidable friction. If a customer sees one approval range in an ad, another on a product detail page (PDP), and a third from an associate, the experience can feel inconsistent before the application even starts.
Review the following placements:
PDP financing badges
Sitewide banners
Financing landing pages
Email templates
Paid social ads
Search ads
In-store signage
Associate scripts
Customer service macros
The goal is simple: Customers should see consistent Snap language everywhere they encounter your brand.
Test the application flow from PDP to approval to checkout. Do it the same way a customer would, across desktop, mobile, and any major traffic source you plan to use during peak.
Look for friction points such as slow page loads, broken links, missing financing badges, unclear CTA language, checkout errors, or abandoned handoffs between your site and the application flow.
A useful test path includes the following:
PDP > Cart > Financing CTA > Application start > Decision experience > Checkout > Confirmation page > Post-purchase email
If traffic spikes before these paths are tested, small issues can quickly become expensive.
Confirm that your shipping, financing, and eligibility logic reflect current product availability and state restrictions. Snap-branded solutions may vary by product and location. Lease-to-own financing is not available to residents of Minnesota, New Jersey, and Wisconsin, so your customer-facing experience should not suggest otherwise where restrictions apply.
This is especially important for merchants with national e-commerce traffic, paid media campaigns, or automated email flows that reach customers across multiple states.
Once the technical setup is ready, make sure customers can clearly see that Snap is available.
PDPs are one of the most important places to present financing clearly. By the time a shopper reaches a PDP, they are actively evaluating whether a product fits their needs and how they might pay for it.
A generic financing badge may be easy to overlook. More specific language can do more work, especially when it connects financing to the product the customer is viewing.
For example, instead of a generic badge, consider language such as:
“Pay over time with Snap Finance”
“Snap Finance available at checkout”
“See if you qualify with Snap Finance”
Use only approved language and confirm all examples, decision references, and product-specific claims before publishing.
A dedicated financing landing page gives customers one place to understand how Snap works with your store. This page can support paid traffic, organic search, email campaigns, associate follow-ups, and customer service conversations. It also helps avoid forcing customers to piece together financing information from scattered badges or checkout prompts.
A strong financing landing page should explain:
What Snap-branded solutions may be available
Where customers can apply
How approvals can be used
How customers can shop online or in store
What customers should expect at checkout
Where customers can go with questions
Keep the page practical. Customers are not looking for a whitepaper. They are looking for confidence that the process is clear.
Peak season email flows often do a lot of selling, but financing language can get buried or become outdated. Review any automated email that could influence a customer’s decision to return, apply, or complete checkout. That includes:
Cart abandonment
Browse abandonment
Price drop
Back-in-stock
Promotional sale emails
Post-purchase emails
Winback campaigns
Make sure Snap language is current, visible, and matched to the customer’s stage in the journey. A cart abandonment email, for example, may need a simple reminder that Snap is available at checkout. A promotional email may need a stronger financing CTA earlier in the message.
Pull every live ad that mentions financing and review it before peak traffic begins. Paid campaigns often continue running long after the original offer, badge, or landing page has changed. That can lead to mismatched expectations when customers click from an ad to your site.
Peak season is not the time to discover that your best-performing ad is pointing to an outdated financing message. Ask your Snap representative about free social media graphics and other messaging to use in your promotions.
Once creative is aligned, prepare the teams who will turn customer interest into action.
Run a 30-minute refresher on when and how to introduce Snap. The goal is to make the conversation feel routine, clear, and compliant.
A simple two-sentence script can help associates bring it up naturally:
“Do you know about Snap Finance? They offer pay-over-time options."
Then, practice the most common objections and simple ways to respond:
“I can’t afford that.” Acknowledge the concern and introduce pay-over-time options without pressure.
“I don’t have good credit.” Reassure the customer that all credit types are welcome to apply, without implying approval is guaranteed.¹
“I want to think about it.” Give the customer space, then offer to explain how the option works so they can compare clearly.
“What’s the catch?” Point customers to the application and agreement details so they can review everything before deciding.
“I don’t want another payment.” Respect the concern and keep the conversation focused on clarity, not persuasion.
The more associates rehearse these moments, the easier it is to respond with confidence when peak traffic gets busy.
Customer service teams should be ready for the most common financing questions before peak season begins.
Create or refresh approved responses for questions such as:
How do I apply?
Can I use Snap online?
Can I use Snap in store?
Where do I see my approval amount?
What happens after I am approved?
Who do I contact about my account?
Can I use Snap on any product?
Why is Snap not available in my state?
What if I have trouble at checkout?
Can customer service complete the application for me?
Clear guidance helps customer service reps prevent unnecessary escalations and keeps customers moving.
For stores with physical locations, signage should make Snap visible before the associate has to explain it. Review counter cards, window decals, product-area signs, price-tag callouts, and QR code placements. Make sure materials reflect current Snap creative, approved language, and working application paths.
In-store signage should support the associate conversation, not replace it. The strongest experience happens when customers see the message and hear it reinforced naturally.
The week before peak is for tightening the dashboard, briefing leadership, and confirming coverage.
Define the metrics your team will review every day during the peak window.
At minimum, track:
Traffic
Financing application starts
Approval rate
Average order value
These four metrics help separate demand issues from execution issues. For example, if traffic is strong but application starts are weak, financing visibility may be the problem. If application starts are strong but checkout completion drops, the issue may be further down the funnel. Snap provides key metrics for your business in your Merchant Portal.
Create a one-page summary before the season begins. This does not need to be complicated. It should give leadership a clear view of the plan, the targets, the reporting sources, and the escalation process.
Include the following:
Peak dates
Sales targets
Financing performance targets
Daily reporting owner
Key Snap placements
Training completion status
Known risks
Internal escalation contacts
Snap support contacts
A simple leadership brief prevents mid-peak surprise meetings because everyone already knows what is being tracked and who owns the response.
Identify who is reachable on the busiest days. This should include internal owners and Snap contacts, especially for merchants with stores, e-commerce teams, paid media teams, and customer service teams operating across different hours.
Confirm coverage for:
Site or checkout issues
Application flow issues
Store questions
Customer service escalations
Paid media changes
Reporting questions
Leadership updates
Do not wait until the first high-traffic day to decide who should respond.
Peak readiness continues when the sale starts. The busiest days require monitoring, and the days after require learning.
During the peak window, watch for changes that could indicate a customer experience problem.
Pay attention to:
Application errors
Approval rate changes
Unusual funnel drop-offs
Real-time monitoring helps teams act while the window is still open. If the issue is a broken CTA or an unclear PDP badge, a quick correction can protect the rest of the peak period.
Within 10 days of peak, document what worked, what failed, and what to repeat. The best time to improve your next peak season is while the details are still fresh. Bring together sales, e-commerce, marketing, store operations, customer service, and leadership to review the same performance picture.
Use the review to answer:
Which Snap placements drove the most engagement?
Which channels produced the most application starts?
Where did customers drop off?
Which stores or categories performed best?
Which associate scripts worked?
Which questions came up most often?
Which reporting views were useful?
Which issues should be fixed before the next peak?
The output should be a short action list, not a long recap deck. Every peak season should make the next one easier to execute.
Peak season does not reward merchants who wait until traffic arrives to fix the customer journey. It rewards merchants who confirm access, clean up messaging, train teams, refresh creative, and define reporting before the busiest days begin. When Snap is visible across the journey and teams know how to support it, financing becomes part of the shopping experience instead of a last-minute save.
Use the four weeks before peak to get the basics right. Then use the peak window to monitor, adjust, and learn.
Talk to your Snap sales representative about creative assets, Merchant Portal resources, and support available before your next major retail season.
Snap Finance, its affiliates, and partners offer consumers a range of solutions, which may include lease-to-own financing, installment loans, retail installment contracts, and credit cards. Product availability may vary. For detailed information, visit snapfinance.com/legal/products
1 Not all applicants are approved. Approvals subject to underwriting qualification criteria.