The Initial Hurdle: 2021โ Freight Fiasco
During the COVID-19 pandemic, Conor from Fort Toys, like many other entrepreneurs, found himself dealing with skyrocketing demandโฆ and skyrocketing freight costs. His product โ a magnetic pillow fort for kids that was funded by a wildly successful Kickstarter campaign โ was both funโฆand bulky.
This was terrible news for a company now on the hook to ship to kids who were suddenly cooped up and hankering for a fort. As Conor told us in a podcast episode from 2022:
Pretty quickly we realized our costs were going to be about 30% higher than we thought. Itโs not the end of the world, itโs something that you can overcome. We were pretty confident that we could raise a little bit more money or sell more product โ it was pretty popular.
It really got tricky when we have over thousands of these in production and weโre starting to book freight and weโre realizing that the budget we had put in for freight isโฆ itโs almost 4 or 5X what we had thought it would be.

Source: Fort
Of course, this stark reality was faced by many small and medium-sized businesses (SMBs) during the peak of the pandemic.
The Twist: Falling Costs, Falling Demand
But what goes up must come down.
Here at Freightos, weโve been tracking sentiment across small and midsize importers as they navigate the wave of COVID and the ensuing ripples. The following data is from a survey we conducted last month (May, 2023) across hundreds of small business importers who tap Freightos.comโs global freight marketplace.
The key takeaway? One challenge appears to have been replaced with another.
In mid-2022 logistics costs began to recede, dropping almost 90% from May to December according to the Freightos Baltic Indexโs China โ East Coast (FBX03) and China to West Coast (FBX01). This made supply chain living easier โ most (74%) importers report that their logistics operations are at least as smooth as they were pre-pandemic. This is a dramatic improvement from last October, where 87% of importers said that their bottom line was getting hit by supply chain costs.

Yet it was soon to be out of the supply chain pot and into the plummeting demand fire. Businesses quickly began to notice a different beast: a significant decrease in consumer demand compounded by looming inventory excesses.
This trend was a while in coming. By 2023, average inventory turnover for small and midsize businesses, had dropped for the 50% percentile ShipBob seller from 1.59 to 0.85 (Source: ShipBob).
As consumers shifted their spending habits post-pandemic, the resulting behavior formed a formidable economic elephant that importers couldnโt ignore. It was time to adapt.
Yet Another Ecommerce Change
Compared to 50 years ago, the ripple effect from COVID, or the other frequent obstacles importers face, seem far more pronounced. As Nisim Taleb pointed out in Black Swan:
โToday, an earthquake or hurricane commands more and more severe economic consequences than it did in the past because of the interlocking relationships between economic entities โฆTokyoโs 1923 earthquake caused a drop of about a third in Japanโs GNP. Extrapolating from the tragedy of Kobe in 1994, we can easily infer that the consequences of another such earthquake in Tokyo would be far costlier than that of its predecessor.โ
Small businesses have undergone four or five ecommerce earthquakes over the past few years. Not all of them badโฆbut many requiring businesses to be retooled, from the rise of eCommerce, to one day shipping, new third party fulfillment options, Shopify and Amazonโs accession, COVID supply chain challenges, and โ now โ reduced demand.
One of the most prominent shifts has been sourcing patterns. Following the COVID import trauma, some 25% of importers are exploring other countries while another 21% are now looking into sourcing domestically.

Overcoming Demand and Inventory Hurdles
However, regardless of where goods are manufactured, they still need buyersโฆand these appear to be in short supply. With the majority of SMBs (57%) experiencing a drop in consumer demand over the last year, the struggle is real. Many importers (38%) are pointing fingers at a consumer spending shift to services or a different mix of goods as the pandemic recedes.

The inventory trend that emerged from ShipBobโs data seems to be extending into 2023. More than a third of small businesses are facing issues with excess inventory.

One silver lining, for consumers at least, is that the drop in logistics is translating into some businesses (26%) lowering their prices, while about 20% report being able to improve their margins through these savings.
Preparing for the Peak Season
If thereโs one thing that weโve learned, itโs that predicting demand is hard. Nearly every company missed how COVID would impact demand (buying way up) or how quickly it would drop off. But itโs still worth asking.
Looking ahead, only about half of the SMBs surveyed anticipate an increase in their importing activity during this yearโs peak season (July โ October). This could well be the new normal, a hallmark of the post-pandemic economic landscape. But, if you look at the last five years, itโs pretty clear that normal isnโt exactly a term that ever fits for supply chains.

The Road Ahead: Embracing Uncertainty
The post-pandemic journey for small businesses like Fort Toys is looking like a roller coaster ride, filled with unexpected twists and turns. These companies have a strong track record of adapting to new tech, new trends in consumer demand, and new trends in distribution. But while the cost of doing global business โ whether sourcing, importing or sales โ has normalized, the demand for global business may be a more daunting challenge.