Black Friday pushes labour costs, overtime and variance against plan to their limits.
Retailers that prepare early see better control of labour spend, fewer compliance risks, and a smoother experience for both customers and employees. Many organisations reduce overtime by up to 50% with the help of accurate forecasting and flexible scheduling tools.
This guide covers how to plan smartly for Black Friday across both traditional stores and the growing number of dark stores that now support online fulfilment.
Black Friday creates a unique set of pressures for frontline teams:
Retailers can only manage these peaks if their scheduling, forecasting and labour planning are tailored for both customer-facing locations and fulfilment hubs.
A dark store is a store-like space used only for online order fulfilment. Customers don’t browse there; the entire layout is built for fast pick-and-pack operations. They’re becoming essential during Black Friday because they:
For peak season, dark stores shift the workload: many retailers now need two workforce plans – one for stores and one for fulfilment – that work together in real-time.
Treat in-store traffic and fulfilment demand separately.
Peak staffing plans should include:
Build in reserves who can switch between store and fulfilment tasks if demand shifts.
Cross-training protects both labour costs and customer experience.
When shifts, tasks or fulfilment priorities change, mobile updates help employees act fast.
During Black Friday, track:
If fulfilment starts to outpace store traffic, be ready to reassign people.
Focus on what drove:
These insights will sharpen your planning for the next Black Friday, Cyber Monday and all other peak events.
See how retail chain Rituals transformed with efficient scheduling in this customer case.
Want to see how smarter scheduling, forecasting, and engagement come together in one platform? Quinyx helps you cut labour costs, protect compliance, and give your frontline a better experience – shift by shift.