To gear up for what is expected to be a very high e-commerce driven holiday shopping period, UPS says it will hire 95,000 seasonal workers this year, and FedEx Corp will hire close to 150,000. Overall retail hiring is expected to be the same as last year’s high numbers, but a shift to preparing for high online sales with those jobs is clear.

eMarketer announced survey results that found while moderate growth of 3.3% is expected for holiday retail overall, ecommerce is anticipated to make its biggest jump since 2011, up 17.2%. 71% of shoppers polled said they would make some to all of their gift purchases online. Rubicon Project found similar results in their survey, finding 73% of respondents will shop online, and that 22% of shoppers plan to do all of their holiday shopping online. The report shows that online shoppers will spend 64% on gift cards, 57% on apparel and accessories, 46% on toys and 37% on technology.

Cyber Monday is on track to produce higher results than Black Friday. A shift in the holiday calendar this year is also expected to help retailers. Christmas falls on a Sunday rather than a Friday like last year, giving last minute shoppers an extra Saturday to shop. Hanukkah begins 18 days later than in 2015, which should help generate sales in the latter part of December.

Source: NRF Smartbrief, Chain Store Age, Drug Store News, Fortune