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-8% CPV
5 MIN READ

DOLLAR STORE
TARGETING

Why dollar store shoppers are your ideal laundromat customers—and how to reach them.

Dollar store exterior storefront

The Demographic Overlap You're Missing

Most laundromat marketing starts with demographic assumptions: target renters, target lower-income households, target apartment dwellers. These work, but they miss a more precise signal hiding in plain sight.

Dollar store shoppers and laundromat users are often the same people.

The correlation isn't about income—it's about behavior. Dollar store shoppers share key characteristics with laundromat users:

When we analyzed Mark 24/7's campaign data, dollar store shoppers delivered $1.45 cost per visit in Florida and $2.34 in Alabama—consistently 8-9% below campaign averages. For context on why these markets differ, see our Florida vs Alabama market comparison.

The "Task Mode" Psychology

Dollar store visitors are already in "errand mode" when they're targeted. Unlike someone scrolling social media at home, a person leaving Dollar General is:

Physically mobile — They're already out running errands

Task-oriented — They're in a "get things done" mindset

Geographically proximate — They're likely within your trade area

Receptive to nearby offers — Location-based suggestions feel relevant

This is why behavioral targeting (what people actually do) outperforms demographic targeting (who we assume people are). The dollar store visit is a behavioral signal that predicts laundromat usage more reliably than income brackets. The same principle applies to first-party customer data, which delivers even better results at $0.22 CPV.

How to Execute Dollar Store Targeting

Step 1: Map dollar stores in your trade area

Identify every Dollar General, Dollar Tree, Family Dollar, and similar discount retailers within 3-5 miles of your laundromat locations. These become your targeting geofences.

Step 2: Set appropriate recency windows

Target people who visited dollar stores within the last 30 days. This ensures the behavioral signal is fresh while maintaining a large enough audience pool.

Step 3: Layer with geographic proximity

Prioritize dollar store visitors who live or work near your laundromat. The combination of behavioral affinity and geographic convenience maximizes conversion probability.

Step 4: Test against control audiences

Run dollar store targeting alongside income-based or renter-based audiences. Compare CPV and conversion rates to validate the approach for your specific market.

Convenience Stores: The Secondary Play

The same logic applies to convenience store visitors, though with slightly weaker correlation. Our data shows convenience store targeting delivers campaign-average results ($1.67 CPV in Florida, $2.58 in Alabama)—not as efficient as dollar stores, but still valuable for audience scale.

The optimal approach: layer both audiences. Dollar store visitors as your primary behavioral segment, convenience store visitors as a secondary expansion audience.

Audience Segment Florida CPV Alabama CPV vs. Average
Dollar Store Shoppers $1.45 $2.34 -8%
Convenience Store Visitors $1.67 $2.58 0%
Competitor Conquest $1.89 $3.12 +20%
Campaign Average $1.57 $2.58 —

Frequently Asked Questions

Why does dollar store targeting work for laundromats?

Dollar store shoppers and laundromat users share key characteristics: value-consciousness, budget awareness, and regular errand-running behavior. Visiting a dollar store is a behavioral signal that correlates with laundromat usage better than demographic proxies like income brackets.

How do you target dollar store shoppers with geofencing?

We draw geofences around Dollar General, Dollar Tree, Family Dollar, and similar stores within your trade area. When someone visits these locations, their mobile device ID is captured. We then serve your laundromat ads to these devices over the following 30 days.

Is dollar store targeting better than income-based targeting?

In our campaigns, dollar store targeting consistently delivers 8-10% lower cost per visit than income-based demographic targeting. Behavioral signals (what people actually do) tend to predict future behavior better than demographic assumptions.

What other behavioral proxies work for laundromat targeting?

Convenience store visitors, apartment complex residents, and discount grocery shoppers all show strong correlation with laundromat usage. The best campaigns layer multiple behavioral signals rather than relying on a single audience.

Related Articles

Marketing Strategy

The $0.22 Secret: Why First-Party Customer Data Outperforms Every Other Targeting Method

First-party data delivers 86% cost reduction compared to third-party targeting.

Tactical Guide

The Competitor Conquest Playbook: Turning Your Rivals' Customers Into Yours

Geofencing competitors costs more but delivers net-new customers.

Market Analysis

Florida vs Alabama: What Market Conditions Drive $1.57 CPV vs $2.58 CPV

Why identical strategies produced 64% different costs across markets.

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