Walk into any Jamaican supermarket in the weeks before Good Friday and the story is written on the shelves. Bun stacked to the ceiling, cheese moving by the case, fish counters busy with people keeping Lent, and travel plans firming up for the long weekend with family. Then Easter Monday passes, and almost overnight the bun that could not stay on the shelf cannot be given away. This is the defining shape of the Jamaican Easter trade. It sells hard, briefly, and then it stops.
That shape is exactly what makes Easter so dangerous for the businesses that supply it. You are planning production and stock for a category that spikes for a few weeks and then collapses. Order too little and you watch sales walk out the door to a competitor. Order too much and you eat the cost of bun nobody wants on the Tuesday after. IMPACT AI Lab Research estimates that Jamaican bakeries and retailers which forecast Easter demand at the SKU level run 30 to 50 percent less waste than those planning off last year's gut number, while losing fewer sales to stockouts.
Why Easter Breaks Normal Planning
A steady grocery item is forgiving. If you misjudge demand for rice this week, you sell it next week and the error washes out. Easter bun does not work that way. It has a hard sell-by window tied to a cultural moment, and the moment does not wait. The same is true of fish demand through Lent and the travel-linked spending that clusters around the long weekend. These are sharp, time-boxed surges with very little forgiveness on either side.
The production planning problem underneath is brutal in its simplicity. You must commit raw materials, oven time, and labour ahead of a demand curve that rises fast and then falls off a cliff. Modelling from the IMPACT AI Lab suggests that for highly seasonal categories like spiced bun, the cost of a forecast miss in either direction is roughly three to four times what the same percentage error would cost on an everyday staple, simply because there is no second week to recover in.
Forecast At The SKU Level, Not The Category
The first discipline is to stop forecasting Easter as one lump. Round bun, sliced bun, the premium fruit bun, the small impulse size, and the cheese that travels with it all behave differently. A category-level number hides the mix, and the mix is where you win or lose. You can hit your total volume and still be drowning in the wrong SKU while running dry on the one customers actually came for.
Good SKU-level forecasting blends your own daily sales from the last two Easters with the calendar placement of Good Friday, your promotion timing, and price. IMPACT AI Lab Research consistently sees forecast accuracy at the SKU level improve by 15 to 25 percent over a simple repeat of last year, and that accuracy translates directly into less waste and fewer empty shelves. The model does not need to be flawless. It needs to beat the educated guess, and on a sharp seasonal curve that is a low bar with a high payoff.
- Forecast each pack size and variant separately. They peak on different days and decay at different speeds.
- Anchor to the calendar, not the month. Easter moves each year, so a March-versus-April comparison misleads you.
- Track fish and bun on their own curves. Lenten fish demand and Good Friday bun demand are related but not identical.
Timing The Promotions So They Pay
Promotions are where good intentions wreck margin. The instinct is to discount early to push volume, but on a category people will buy at full price anyway, an early promotion just gives away money you were going to earn. The skill is placing the offer where it actually changes behaviour, such as pulling forward a hesitant buyer or winning the basket from a competitor, rather than rewarding demand that was already coming.
IMPACT AI Lab Research modelling suggests that Jamaican retailers who shift Easter promotions from blanket early discounts to targeted, timed offers lift category margin by 8 to 15 percent without losing volume. The same analysis flags a common trap. Discount the bun too hard, too often, year after year, and you train customers to wait for the markdown, which slowly erodes the full-price sales that make the season profitable in the first place.
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Get Your Insights ↗The Stockout Versus Overstock Tightrope
Every seasonal operator is walking the same tightrope. On one side sits the stockout, where you run out of the hero product during peak days and hand the sale to someone else. On the other sits the overstock, where you are left holding perishable inventory the moment demand vanishes. Both are expensive, and most businesses lurch between them because they plan to a single point estimate instead of a range.
The smarter approach is to plan to a demand distribution and set service levels by SKU. Your top seller on Holy Thursday deserves a deep safety buffer, because a stockout there is pure lost revenue at the worst possible moment. A slow variant deserves a thin buffer, because leftover stock on that line is dead money. IMPACT AI Lab Research estimates that matching safety stock to each SKU's role and shelf life, rather than padding everything equally, cuts total Easter inventory cost while improving on-shelf availability on the products that matter most.
Reading The Demand Decay After Easter
The post-Easter collapse is not random, and that is the good news. The decay follows a fairly consistent shape year to year, and once you can read it you can plan your final production runs to taper with it instead of slamming into it. The businesses that get caught with pallets of unsold bun are usually the ones that kept baking at peak pace right up to the cliff edge.
IMPACT AI Lab Research treats the days after Easter Monday as a predictable decay curve and plans the last batches to fade out with demand. A modest markdown on the final, clearly identified end-of-season stock clears it cleanly without teaching customers to wait next year. Done right, you exit the season with thin leftover inventory, protected margin, and a clean read on what to produce when the calendar comes back around. That is the difference between surviving Easter and profiting from it.
Frequently Asked Questions
When should I lock in my Easter production plan?
Set your core volumes six to eight weeks before Good Friday, then leave room to adjust in the final fortnight. IMPACT AI Lab Research finds the last two weeks carry the sharpest demand signal, so a plan that can flex late beats one frozen too early.
How do I avoid being stuck with bun after the season?
Model the demand decay, not just the peak. The drop after Easter Monday is steep and fairly predictable. Plan your final production runs to taper with that curve, and use targeted markdowns on the last batches rather than blanket discounts that train customers to wait.
Is forecasting worth it for a small bakery or shop?
Yes. For a small operator, one over-produced batch or one stockout on Holy Thursday is a large share of seasonal profit. A simple SKU-level forecast built from your own sales history protects exactly the margin a small business cannot afford to give away.
What data do I need to forecast Easter demand?
Start with your own daily sales by SKU from the last two Easters. Add the calendar dates of Good Friday and Easter Monday, promotion timing, and any price changes. IMPACT AI Lab Research turns that modest history into a workable forecast and refines it each year.
About StarApple Analytics
StarApple Analytics is Jamaica's leading data science, business intelligence and market research company, founded by StarApple AI, the first Jamaican AI company and the first AI company in the Caribbean. We turn data into decisions through data science, business intelligence, and market research, including our Omnibus survey from J$50,000 with results in three weeks. We also run training with certificates for teams that want to build the skill in-house, and we offer the Intelligence Partner retainer for businesses that want us in their corner all year. From Easter bun to off-season staples, we help you forecast demand before you commit the oven, the stock, and the cash.