Every brand enters the holiday season armed with a carefully crafted plan, a perfectly tuned calendar, and warehouses ready for the rush. But even the best operations can crack when orders surge.
With this in mind, we’ve got the top peak season eCommerce tips to help you keep calm during the storm.
The truth is that peak season rarely runs perfectly, but the thing that separates brands is managing any problems with confidence and composure.
This blog is your guide to staying calm when pressure is high, and to turning peak season headaches into opportunities for long-term customer loyalty.
You’ve probably experienced it before; the moment in the holiday season when your plan starts to wobble. It’s the eCommerce version of turbulence: unexpected, uncomfortable, but rarely catastrophic.
The key to staying on top of challenges is visibility. For example, if order volumes spike beyond forecasts (shoutout to your latest TikTok campaign), real-time dashboards can help you quickly identify where the bottlenecks are. This’ll help you shift resources, reroute orders, and focus your fulfillment capacity on high-value or time-sensitive items first.
You can’t control demand, but you can control how quickly you react if demand exceeds your forecasts. Your best friend here is real-time data.
Bad delivery events happen. Peak season puts enormous pressure on courier networks, and even the most reliable partners make mistakes.
Despite bad delivery being out of your brand’s control, it’s your response to these events that maintains and builds customer trust.
This is where technology earns its keep. Without wanting to sound “salesy,” a great example is our Delivery Assured solution.
Delivery Assured puts the customer in control of their deliveries, offering real-time updates, self-service capabilities, and quick resolution to bad delivery events.
It automates the exchange of information between the retailer, consumer, and us (fulfilmentcrowd), streamlining the communication and investigation process when things go wrong.
By automating this process, we already have everything we need to approach the courier and make a claim. What’s great is that during this claim process, we’ll credit you with the amount we’re capturing back from the courier. Faster refunds, happier customers.
One of the cruel realities of peak season is that your hottest SKUs can sell faster than ever, while other inventory performs the same as any other time of year.
When this happens, visibility and agility are everything. Smart inventory management systems track sales in real time and allow you to easily redistribute stock across locations and channels.
If an item’s running low, make it clear to your customers. Update your product pages with accurate delivery windows and availability information to reduce the chance of customer disappointment. Remember, transparency beats apology every time.
But to avoid this whole scenario, one thing you need to nail pre-peak season is your forecasting. In reality, the likelihood of getting a resupply from your manufacturer mid-November is pretty low.
When we asked CEO Lee Thompson for his top peak season tips, accurate forecasting was at the top of his list.
Forecasting takes historical and recent stock data — amongst other factors — into account, to help you better predict the amount of stock you’ll need for the peak season.
A good forecasting tool will:
Put simply: effective forecasting is your best play to avoid stock issues altogether.
The customer journey doesn’t end at checkout. Wrong sizes, changed minds, or a product simply looking different online; no matter the reason, it’s down to you to handle returns effectively.
The goal shouldn’t be to try and eliminate returns — try this, and you’ve lost before you even begin. By making returns painless (for you and your customers), you can drive long-term buyer loyalty.
Imagine: you’ve purchased a product online and want to return it. Getting it back to the company is tiresome, it costs you money, and you wait weeks for a refund. Be honest, would you buy from that business again?
Instead, make returns easy on your customers by:
Handled well, returns become a way to prove your brand’s reliability. After all, an easy process and fast refunds calm nerves more than any apology email ever could.
When your peak season isn’t going as smoothly as anticipated, open and consistent communication keeps your brand steady. Customers often don’t need perfection; they need honesty.
The winning strategy here is proactivity. Tell your customers if a delivery’s running late, or when inventory is temporarily out of stock. A late delivery causes significantly less harm to your reputation if the customer was informed beforehand.
Even a simple “we’ve got your order, and we’re on it” email can make a big difference. Transparency builds trust, and trust keeps customers coming back.
Internally, it’s vital to align fulfillment, marketing, and customer service so everyone’s working from the same information. A common mistake is launching a promotion or flash sale without informing your fulfillment provider, meaning they could potentially be caught off guard by a sudden surge in demand.
Of all the peak season eCommerce tips available, investing in effective technology is arguably top of the list.
Technology can’t stop every issue, but it can make the peak season chaos far more manageable.
When you’ve got the right systems in place, you’ll focus less on firefighting and more on delighting your customers.
We’ll be honest, no peak season ever runs perfectly. Packages get delayed, carriers get overloaded, and systems are pushed to capacity.
But, with the right visibility, technology, and communication strategy, you’ll be well equipped to stop your brand crumbling under the chaos.
After all, peak season shouldn’t be just about “getting through it,” but a chance for you to welcome new customers, grow rapidly, and set yourself up for a healthy Q1 next year.
These peak season eCommerce tips won’t help you stop every surprise, but they’ll help you handle them with more confidence. Because when your competitors are panicking, it’s your calm that’ll keep customers coming back.