
Diversifying Your eCommerce Fulfillment Strategy: Lessons from the 321 Loophole
Staying ahead often means being informed by the past but not letting the past control or restrict you. Sometimes things change quickly as was the case with Mexico’s recent changes to Tariffs and IMMEX regulations which have abruptly closed the door for apparel brands leveraging the Section 321 de minimis provision which allows duty-free imports into the U.S. valued at under $800 per shipment.
What lessons should brands learn from the 321 closure?
Be Explicit about your Assumptions
Choosing the right fulfillment provider isn’t only about location or price—there are a lot of other assumptions that go into making that decision. Before committing to a provider, take time to codify the assumptions that led to your decision. By explicitly defining these assumptions, you create a roadmap for evaluating potential risks and planning contingencies.
Here are some of the most common assumptions you’re probably already making:
- Financial Stability:
- Assumption: Your provider is financially secure and can sustain your business for the long haul.
- Reality Check: Regularly review your provider’s financial health, particularly in volatile markets.
- Potential Risk: When a provider goes out of business, you may not get access to your inventory for several weeks or months which could kill a startup.
- Risk Mitigator: Ensure that your business does not account for more than 20% of your providers total revenue and consider using different companies for your regional fulfillment strategy vs a single provider.
- Location Suitability:
- Assumption: Your provider’s location is aligned with your customer base and shipping needs.
- Reality Check: Regularly analyze your customer demographic shifts and shipping trends that could make their location less ideal over time.
- Potential Risk: If your customers are farther away from your provider you’ll end up paying more for slower shipping speeds.
- Risk Mitigator: When first starting out, avoid putting your provider near a coast and instead stick to well known logistics corridors that are equal distance to your general population unless there is a unique angle to your business (IE selling Seattle Mariners jerseys)
- Capacity to Handle Your Volume:
- Assumption: The provider has sufficient labor and systems to meet your current and future order volume.
- Reality Check: Look for performance changes around seasonal spikes, labor shortages, or unexpected growth that can strain their capacity.
- Potential Risk: If the provider is unable to secure sufficient labor your customers will wait longer for their orders to be fulfilled.
- Risk Mitigator: Utilize an automated scorecard like Capabl to keep tabs on any sudden drops in SLA performance.
- Alignment of Priorities:
- Assumption: Your business is a priority for the provider, and they want to maintain a long-term relationship.
- Reality Check: Larger clients or better-paying accounts could edge your business down their priority list.
- Potential Risk: In crunch time, the provider will allocate scarce resources to their biggest and most important clients.
- Risk Mitigator: If you are in a provider with much larger clients, make sure that your program is as buttoned up as possible. Ensure that it is easy to onboard so that you’ll be successful with a surge of temp labor.
- Facility Security:
- Assumption: The facility is secure and minimizes risks of theft, damage, or data breaches.
- Reality Check: Confirm the provider’s security protocols and invest in third-party audits if necessary.
- Potential Risk: Poorly secured facilities oftentimes have higher “shrinkage” rates that ends up being priced lower than your own product in different channels.
- Risk Mitigator: Utilize a company like Izba to conduct a security audit TAPA standard security audit.
- Your Business Stability:
- Assumption: Your business needs will remain relatively unchanged.
- Reality Check: E-commerce evolves rapidly. A provider suitable today may not meet your needs tomorrow as you expand product lines or enter new markets.
- Potential Risk: You could be contractually obligated to pay for space or restricted to move if there is a massive increase or decrease to your volume.
- Risk Mitigator: Do your best to negotiate away monthly minimums or caps on your volume or storage. Regularly communicate with your provider.
Prepare for “What-If” Scenarios
Once you’ve codified your assumptions, the next step is to develop contingency plans for each potential breakdown. Ask yourself:
- What happens if my provider becomes financially unstable?
- How will I adapt if my customer demographics shift?
- What’s my backup plan if my volume doubles unexpectedly?
Relying on a single provider or fulfillment strategy can expose your business to unnecessary risks. Diversifying your network by incorporating providers in different regions—such as Canada, Mexico, or even offshore options like Hong Kong or the Dominican Republic—can mitigate risks and enhance your agility.
Pro Tip: Use Slotted’s collaborative RFP tool to vet providers and diversify your options. Our platform ensures you match with fulfillment centers that meet your unique business needs, helping you codify assumptions and evaluate risk factors effectively.