According to Retail Dive, Kohl's ran a summer sale timed to coincide with Amazon Prime Day, positioning hundreds of items below the $20 threshold. Not 20% off, not up to $20 — a hard ceiling that made comparison shopping instant. The move signals a pricing tactic physical-product brands can adapt: anchor on a round-number barrier, not a percentage, to pull purchase decisions forward when competitors flood the channel.
Kohl's selected inventory across apparel, home goods, and accessories and marked each piece to stay under $20. The threshold became the campaign message. Shoppers scanning Prime Day deals could mentally benchmark: Amazon's widget at $24.99 versus Kohl's comparable item at $19. The retailer published the sale in advance, giving the price ceiling time to circulate before Prime Day traffic peaked. The strategy treated the number itself as the offer, turning price into a binary filter rather than a margin calculation.
The mechanism works because round-number thresholds reduce cognitive load. A shopper evaluating hundreds of Prime Day Lightning Deals must process variable discounts, shipping delays, and membership requirements. A flat "everything here is under $20" collapses that decision tree into a single question: do I need this item? The ceiling also frames value without requiring the customer to reverse-engineer original pricing or compare across SKUs. Kohl's leveraged this during a week when Amazon's own pricing was deliberately chaotic, using clarity as the contrast.
For a small physical-product brand, the same play runs on a tighter catalogue. Choose a threshold that sits below your category's median transaction — if competitors average $35, set yours at $29. Pull 12 to 20 SKUs into a single collection: overstock, sample runs, prior-season colourways, or items with favourable landed cost. Price every piece at or below the threshold, then name the collection after the number: "The Under-29 Shelf" or "Sub-30 Summer Edit". Publish it on your site as a dedicated landing page, announce it via email 48 hours before a known traffic spike — Prime Day, Black Friday, a competitor's launch week — and run paid search ads bidding on your category + "under [threshold]".
The cost line stays manageable. If you carry 15 items at an average cost of goods sold of $12, pricing them at $28 yields $16 margin per unit. Assume a 10% conversion lift during the event window due to reduced decision friction; at 500 site visitors, that's 50 units moved, or $800 in margin against zero incremental ad spend if you time it to ambient traffic. The threshold itself becomes repeatable — quarterly "Under-X" drops that train your audience to expect clarity when everyone else is running percentages.
The broader pattern: when the market is loud, legibility wins. Kohl's didn't need the lowest price on every item; it needed the simplest promise while Amazon's catalogue thrashed. A one-person brand with 30 SKUs can execute the same contrast by naming a number and sticking to it, turning a pricing tactic into a recurring event your buyers set reminders for.