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Retail Strategies & Supplier Insights
Discover the strategies and insights you need to thrive in the competitive retail landscape. Retail Strategies & Supplier Insights delivers expert advice, actionable tips, and the latest industry trends tailored specifically for retail suppliers. Whether you’re looking to boost sales, recover profits, or navigate retailer relationships, our blog is your go-to resource for success.


Why Good Products Still Get Rejected by Retail Buyers
A good product isn’t always enough to get on the shelf. That’s frustrating for suppliers because, from their side of the table, the product may feel like the whole story. It tastes great. It works well. The packaging looks good. Customers like it. Friends and family love it. Maybe it’s even doing well in local stores, specialty shops, Amazon, Walmart Marketplace, or a regional chain. So the next step feels obvious. Send it to a major retail buyer. But then nothing happens. No

Jon Allen
2 days ago7 min read


2D Barcodes Are Coming. Don’t Sleep on It.
A barcode problem rarely stays a barcode problem. It turns into an item setup problem. Then a packaging problem.Then a warehouse problem.Then a buyer frustration problem.Then, if nobody catches it early, a deduction problem. That’s why suppliers shouldn’t treat 2D barcodes like some distant technology update. They’re not just a new little square on the back of the package. They’re part of a much bigger shift in how retailers want product information captured, shared, scanned,

Jon Allen
4 days ago6 min read


System-Triggered Chargebacks Are the New Margin Leak
The retailer’s system does not care that your team was busy. It does not know your warehouse manager was out sick. It does not care that your carrier said the shipment was “basically on time.” It sees a mismatch. Then it takes the money. That is the new reality of deductions for suppliers. Retail chargebacks have always existed, but the process is becoming faster, more data-driven, and less forgiving. Supply Chain Brain recently reported that AI is contributing to a rise in r

Jon Allen
May 155 min read


Tariffs Took the First Bite. Retail Deductions Took the Rest.
Most suppliers can see tariffs coming.
They may not like them. They may not be able to control them fully. But they can usually see the cost showing up somewhere in the landed cost calculation.
Freight is similar. Painful, yes. But visible.
The deduction that shows up three weeks later? The freight claim nobody recognizes? The short pay tied to a shipment that arrived “close enough” but not quite per the retailer’s system?

Jon Allen
May 135 min read


Private Label Is Coming for Your Shelf Space
There is a quiet conversation happening in retail right now.
It usually does not start with, “We are replacing your item.” It starts with something softer.
“We’re reviewing the category.”
“We’re looking at value options.”
“We’re evaluating our private brand strategy.”
Suppliers know what that means. Shelf space is being questioned. Margin is being studied.

Jon Allen
May 114 min read


Retail Deductions: The Biggest Revenue Leak Suppliers Ignore
A retail supplier can win the buyer meeting, ship the order, hit the reset, and still lose money after the sale. That is the part people outside the supplier world do not always understand. The sale is not finished when the product leaves the dock. It is not even finished when it lands on the shelf. For many CPG brands, the real financial story shows up later, when the check arrives short. A shortage deduction here.A freight chargeback there.A promotional allowance that does

Jon Allen
May 18 min read


Why Retail Sales Growth Isn’t Turning Into Cash
You shipped the product. The retailer received it. The shopper bought it.
So why didn’t the money show up?
Many CPG suppliers are quietly frustrated right now. Sales reports look good, retail distribution is growing, and buyers are interested. But when accounting checks the cash collected, things get complicated.

Jon Allen
Apr 296 min read


Private Label Keeps Getting Harder to Beat
Many branded suppliers still see private label as just the cheaper product tucked away at the end of the shelf. That way of thinking is outdated. Private label is no longer quietly in the background. It has grown, become more focused, and plays a bigger role than before. Circana reported on March 31 that U.S. private label sales hit $330 billion in 2025, with a 24% unit share and a 23% dollar share of the market. Circana also noted that private label is now a key growth dr

Jon Allen
Apr 246 min read


One-Hour Delivery Changes Supplier Risk
Fast delivery might seem like just a retail issue. But for suppliers, it comes down to execution. As delivery promises get faster, there is less room for mistakes like poor item data, weak packaging, inaccurate inventory, or minor compliance errors. Reuters reported in March that Amazon rolled out 1-hour and 3-hour shipping in markets across the U.S., including large cities such as Los Angeles and Chicago. The service covers more than 90,000 products and is designed to incr

Jon Allen
Apr 225 min read


Tight Inventory Raises the Cost of Forecast Misses
In the past, missing a forecast often went unnoticed for a while. Extra inventory used to sit in the system, late shipments were manageable, and poor replenishment decisions rarely caused immediate problems. Today, that safety buffer is quickly disappearing. Reuters reported that in January 2026, U.S. business inventories fell 0.1%, wholesale inventories dropped 0.5 %, and t he inventory-to-sales ratio declined to 1.35 . Now, there is less room for mistakes . Reuters: March I

Jon Allen
Apr 204 min read


Category Mergers Put Suppliers on Alert
Major mergers are happening again. This trend affects not only Wall Street but also suppliers, making it essential for them to pay close attention. Reuters reported on April 3 that consumer megadeals made a rare comeback in the first quarter of 2026. Sysco’s $29 billion acquisition of Jetro Restaurant Depot and McCormick’s nearly $45 billion purchase of Unilever’s food business ranked among the quarter’s top global transactions. It was the first time since 2015 that two U.S.

Jon Allen
Apr 173 min read


Same-Day Delivery Raises Supplier Costs
Although same-day delivery is typically viewed as a retailer initiative, it is creating new operational problems for suppliers. FedEx recently launched FedEx SameDay Local, providing two-hour and end-of-day delivery through more than 1,000 providers via OneRail.

Jon Allen
Apr 153 min read


Fast Retail Makes Small Mistakes Costly
Retail moves faster than ever.
That much is certain.
What’s less obvious is how this speed affects suppliers.
This speed raises the cost of even minor mistakes.

Jon Allen
Apr 153 min read


Grocery Price Wars: Who Really Pays?
In the U.S. grocery business, price pressure never stays on the shelf. It travels. A retailer sharpens prices to stay competitive. A shopper notices. Traffic improves, maybe. But behind the scenes, suppliers are often pulled into the effort through lower costs, bigger promotions, increased trade spend, and more pressure to keep the machine moving without mistakes. That is where things get expensive. And right now, the timing matters. The National Retail Federation forecasts U

Jon Allen
Apr 154 min read


Retail Margin Leaks After the Sale
When supplier teams receive a purchase order, they often feel a quick sense of relief.
The order is confirmed, the product is on its way, and the retailer has agreed.
But when the payment arrives, it falls short.

Jon Allen
Apr 134 min read


Excessive Defectives Hurt Supplier Margins
Retail suppliers usually do not lose margin from one dramatic collapse. They lose it a little at a time. A damaged case here. A leaking unit there. A label that scuffs too easily. A product that arrives looking different than the image online. Then the credits, returns, write-offs, and awkward buyer conversations start stacking up. What looked like a quality issue turns into a margin issue. That is why excessive defectives matter so much right now. The retail environment is s

Jon Allen
Apr 34 min read


Private Label: How to Keep Your Shelf Space
Private label is no longer a side story. It is one of the main stories in retail right now. PLMA reported that U.S. private label sales reached a record $282.8 billion in 2025 , up 3.3% year over year. National brands grew just 1.2% . Over the past five years, private label dollar sales increased $64.8 billion , and dollar share rose from 19.1% to 21.3% . Unit share reached a record 23.5% . That is not a blip. That is momentum. And the story is evolving. Circana said this we

Jon Allen
Apr 14 min read


Retail Tariffs: Protect Supplier Margins
Tariffs are still creating real turbulence for suppliers in late March 2026, and the damage is not staying neatly inside the sourcing department. Reuters reports that consumer-facing companies projected a combined financial impact of $21.0 billion to $22.9 billion for 2025 and nearly $15 billion for 2026 from tariff disruptions, while the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics reported that import prices rose 1.3% in February, the largest monthly increase since March 2022. Circana a

Jon Allen
Mar 303 min read


Private Label Growth Is Reshaping Grocery
There was a time when private label mostly meant “cheaper alternative.”
Not anymore.
Private label sales in the U.S. reached a record $282.8 billion in 2025, and store brands grew 3.3%, nearly triple the growth rate of national brands at 1.2%. They also hit all-time highs of 21.3% dollar share and 23.5% unit share. In food and beverage specifically, private label now holds about 23% market share. That is not a side story. That is the story.

Jon Allen
Mar 233 min read


OTIF & Chargebacks—The Silent 1–5% Tax
Most suppliers don’t lose margin in one dramatic moment.
They lose it the boring way.
A few late trucks. A label that doesn’t scan. An Advance Ship Notice (ASN) that doesn’t match. A routing guide rule that someone didn’t know changed. Then the remittance comes in… short.

Jon Allen
Mar 133 min read
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