When fulfillment goes wrong, the fix is rarely simple. Teams end up relabeling units, rebuilding kits, replacing damaged product, or repacking shipments to meet retailer specs. These fixes are more than just labor redirections.
Consider that:
In one example, a food and beverage brand pulled a warehouse team to relabel 20,000 units due to a lot code error. On paper, it may have looked like a labeling fix. What it really was is a $20K–$40K mistake accounting for labor costs, freight charge, and missed opportunities.
Multiply incidents like that across the year, and “one small fix” becomes six-figure recurring expenses that strategy leaders must come to terms with and implement proactive systems to mitigate future repeat occurrences.
For many growing brands, chargebacks can quietly consume 1–2% of annual revenue. Repeated issues may even jeopardize shelf space or trigger stricter compliance oversight putting your brand in a losing market position.
Expedited Freight Is a Bandage with a High Price Tag
When something goes wrong, speed becomes a fallback. Brands rush products overnight, rebook trucks, or hand-carry shipments to protect retailer relationships.
But the cost of saving face can be steep:
Why is expedited freight so costly? Because it compresses lead times, disrupts allocation planning, and forces last-minute coordination between multiple teams. Carriers charge a premium because rush orders jump the line, essentially pulling capacity from existing freight. Internally, fulfillment teams must reconfigure labor and dock schedules, leading to inefficiencies and error risk.
You're not just paying for speed—you're absorbing the cost of operational risk.
Inventory Waste from Avoidable Delays
Average execution often means missed windows, short-dated product, or aging inventory.
This leads to:
For fast-moving categories, the difference between “on time” and “3-days late” can be the difference between sell-through and scrap.
In the end, you pay the premium freight charges to protect your brand and maintain your customer’s promise for on-time delivery. Neither scenario is the answer, what you need is to prevent the problem in the first place. And that starts with a resilient supply chain.
Operational Excellence IS Cost Control
The solution starts by addressing operational instability at its root. Most fulfillment issues are not isolated. They’re symptoms of deeper breakdowns in process, visibility, and accountability. Fixing them requires more than quick wins or temporary staffing. It demands a logistics process equipped to deliver repeatable, disciplined, and operational maturity at scale.
To build a high-performance foundation, your capabilities should include:
At scale, the costs of average execution is cumulative. The costs compound quickly and once you're busy “reacting”, it's hard to get out without the right infrastructure behind you.
Source Logistics
“We know our current fulfillment setup isn’t the right fit—but we’re too deep in the weeds to switch” is a common sentiment among ops leads who feel stuck in reactive cycles that we aim to break at Source Logistics. We operate as an extension of your team—not just fulfilling orders, but safeguarding performance. We provide:
With over 26 years of history growing our loyal customer base, these value-added services are just the start of how we can create the resilient supply chain you need to profitably grow your retail brands.
Looking for a partner who treats precision like a P&L responsibility? Let’s talk.
info@sourcelogistics.com | www.sourcelogistics.com