Mistake #4: Underestimating Peak Season Complexity
The issue: Brands often assume their 3PL will “just figure it out” come Q4—or worse, they don’t communicate plans until it’s too late.
Why it matters: Peak season is when you need fulfillment running at its best. But without collaborative prep, volume surges can lead to delays, mis-picks, and excessive costs.
Avoid it:
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Share your promotional calendar and shipping cutoffs by early Q3.
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Discuss labor scaling, order prioritization, and carrier diversification.
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Align on any custom packaging, inserts, or bundling requirements well in advance.
Action step: Co-create a peak season playbook with your 3PL that outlines contingencies, roles, and key deadlines.
Mistake #5: Failing to Define Success Metrics
The issue: Without alignment on what success looks like, frustrations build and miscommunications fester.
Why it matters: You can’t improve what you’re not measuring—and your 3PL can’t hit targets they didn’t know existed.
Avoid it:
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Set clear KPIs for order accuracy, ship time, returns processing, and customer communication.
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Ask your 3PL what metrics they’re already tracking and how they report on them.
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Align on review cadences (weekly, monthly, quarterly) to revisit and refine goals.
Action step: Start every relationship with a shared scorecard that you both review regularly—and evolve as your business scales.
Mistake #6: Expecting White-Glove Results on a Budget
The issue: Some brands demand high-level service but don’t budget for the labor, complexity, or tech required to deliver it.
Why it matters: A low-cost provider often can’t handle the nuanced needs of a growing, multi-channel ecommerce brand—and that misalignment hurts both sides.
Avoid it:
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Be realistic about your operational needs—and budget accordingly.
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Ask for itemized pricing so you understand where your money goes (and where you’re cutting corners).
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Know when it’s time to graduate from low-cost fulfillment to strategic fulfillment.
Action step: Compare your fulfillment spend against customer LTV and cart value. If you’re losing brand loyalty or reviews due to delays or errors, your “cheap” provider may be costing you more.
Mistake #7: Treating Returns Like an Afterthought
The issue: Brands focus on outbound fulfillment and ignore what happens when orders come back.
Why it matters: Reverse logistics is expensive and time-sensitive. Without a plan, returned items pile up, inventory records go stale, and customers lose trust.
Avoid it:
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Align on return intake timelines, quality checks, and restock protocols.
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Decide how returned inventory will be processed: resell, refurbish, or dispose.
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Communicate your returns policy clearly on your storefront—and enforce it consistently.
Action step: Build returns handling into your SLA with your 3PL and ensure both parties know what “good” looks like.
The Best 3PL Relationships Go Both Ways
Your 3PL can only succeed if you do. The most profitable partnerships happen when brands and fulfillment teams operate as one integrated unit—not as isolated silos.
If you’re in the market for a 3PL, don’t just ask, “Can you ship my products?” Ask instead:
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“Can we collaborate, grow, and scale together?”
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“What does a smooth working relationship look like on your end?”
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“How can I be a client that helps you help me?”
Start there—and you’ll avoid the mistakes others have already paid for.
Interested in learning more? Give us a call, we’d love to chat.