Flat rate promo for different priced items

I need to set up a promo for two specific kinds of wine that are two different prices (one is $28, one is $22), so that if someone orders 12 or more bottles of those wines they pay a flat price per bottle. Is there any way to set this up? I can’t seem to find one.

Do they need to buy 12 of the specific SKU, or can they buy a 12 bottle combo (i.e. 4 x SKU A, and 8 x SKU B)?

12 bottle combo is the intention, so 4 x SKU A and 8 x SKU B would be great, or any other combination that they’d like.

I don’t believe there is a great way to achieve this specific promo if it’s a mixed case :frowning: . If it would be a set dollar off each item (not different per SKU) or if it was a percentage discount it would work.

That’s what I thought, it’ll only work if they are the same price. Hopefully that’s a feature we can get in the future, it’s the kind of promo we like to run every few months.

Thanks anyway Brent.

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You could always make a couple different bundles with various mixes and hard-set the price.

Would that automatically apply the bundle price if they add the right number of bottles to their cart? Or do they specifically have to buy the bundle?

The latter, sadly.

You can create one promo for the 2 wines at every “order total” increment from $242 up to $336 (74 total promos). Like at 242 it takes off $22. At $243 it takes off $23… for all 74 promos exclude every product that isnt these two. Test. Kind ot joking, though setting up 72 promos isnt unheard of

This sounds like a terrible nightmare you had when you had the flu. I’ve had to set up extra promos to keep the wine club discounts from doubling up on sales items, but I think I’ve done a max of 5. Is 72 what happens when you run more than one sale at a time?

If anyone’s wondering: we settled for the classic strategy of “eh, close enough” and gave a percentage discount on 12+ bottles that averages out the flat rate, the more expensive bottle is a little over and the less expensive bottle is a little cheaper.

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72 happens with more than one sale at a time, and things like 5 separate promos needing to apply to 35 different types of people.

“Eh, close enough” feels gross, but they’ll be no discernible difference from a sales perspective.

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