Why Fulfillment RFPs Fail Before Pricing Is Even Discussed

Struggling to compare 3PL proposals? The issue usually isn’t pricing, it’s broken RFP inputs. Here’s how fulfillment RFPs fail early and what to fix upstream.
Slotted
February 3, 2026

When a fulfillment RFP doesn’t go well, price usually gets the blame.

Providers are “too expensive.”

Proposals are “all over the place.”

Nothing feels directly comparable.

But in most cases, pricing isn’t where the process broke.

By the time numbers are exchanged, many fulfillment RFPs have already failed quietly, structurally, and often without the brand realizing it.

Understanding why this happens is one of the fastest ways to run a better RFP, attract better-fit providers, and avoid costly surprises later.

The Myth: Pricing Is the Problem

It’s easy to believe that pricing is the issue because it’s the most visible output of an RFP.

But pricing is downstream.

Rates only reflect the assumptions a provider is forced to make based on the information you give them. When those inputs are unclear, inconsistent, or incomplete, pricing becomes noisy not because the provider is careless, but because the signal is weak.

When brands say, “These quotes are impossible to compare,” what they’re often seeing is input failure, not pricing failure.

Where Fulfillment RFPs Actually Break Down

1. Inconsistent Definitions of Volume

One of the earliest and most common failure points is how volume is described.

Common issues include:

  1. Mixing orders, units, and shipments interchangeably
  2. Not separating average days from peak days
  3. Providing a single monthly number that hides volatility

From a 3PL’s perspective, this forces guesswork around labor, space, and automation assumptions. Two providers can receive the same spreadsheet and model it in completely different ways.

The result: wildly different pricing that looks like a pricing problem, but isn’t.

2. Hidden Complexity That Appears Too Late

Many brands unintentionally downplay complexity early in the process.

Not because they’re being deceptive, but because complexity feels “normal” inside their business.

Examples:

  1. Subscription logic mixed with DTC
  2. Wholesale orders that behave nothing like DTC
  3. Kitting, inserts, or customization that isn’t obvious from SKU count alone

When this complexity emerges later during calls, follow-ups, or site visits, providers have to rework assumptions. Trust erodes. Timelines stretch. Confidence drops.

By then, the RFP has already lost momentum.

3. Treating the RFP Like a Spreadsheet, Not a System

A fulfillment operation isn’t a static set of fees. It’s a living system of:

  1. Labor
  2. Space
  3. Technology
  4. Carrier strategy
  5. Exception handling

When an RFP focuses purely on line-item pricing without context, providers are forced to optimize for what’s visible often at the expense of what actually matters long-term.

This is how brands end up with:

  1. Cheap proposals that can’t scale
  2. Aggressive assumptions that break under real volume
  3. Relationships that feel brittle from day one

4. Precision Where Predictability Is Needed

Many first-time RFPs overemphasize precision.

Exact order counts.

Exact SKU totals.

Exact future projections.

The problem isn’t accuracy, it’s false confidence.

3PLs don’t need perfect numbers. They need to understand how your business behaves:

  1. How volatile volume is
  2. What drives spikes
  3. How quickly things change

When precision replaces predictability, providers either pad risk or underprice and hope for the best. Neither outcome leads to a strong partnership.

5. Signaling a Transactional Relationship (Unintentionally)

The structure of the RFP sends a message, whether intended or not.

Signals that often raise concern for providers:

  1. No opportunity for clarification
  2. Aggressive timelines with no context
  3. Communication that treats providers as interchangeable bidders

These signals don’t just affect pricing, they affect who chooses to participate seriously.

Strong providers with healthy pipelines are often selective. If the process feels purely transactional, they may disengage long before submitting a thoughtful proposal.

Why This Matters More Than Price Ever Will

When fulfillment RFPs fail early, the downstream effects are expensive:

  1. Re-pricing after go-live
  2. Operational friction
  3. Short-lived partnerships
  4. Another RFP sooner than planned

All of that cost dwarfs small differences in per-order rates.

The most successful RFPs don’t produce the cheapest proposals. They produce clear, confident next steps with providers who understand the business they’re evaluating.

The Real Fix Isn’t Better Negotiation

Brands often respond to RFP friction by:

  1. Adding more tabs
  2. Asking for more detail
  3. Pushing harder on pricing

But the fix is almost always upstream.

Clearer inputs.

Shared definitions.

Better signaling of how the business actually operates.

In the next post, we’ll break down the minimum information a 3PL truly needs to evaluate fit and why giving less (but better) data leads to stronger outcomes than overwhelming providers with detail.

If pricing feels confusing in your RFP, it’s not a failure. It’s feedback. The question is whether you know where to look.

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