Ecommerce Resilience Check List
I could try and sell a service or ask you to add me and comment “audit”. But this isn’t about me, Space & Time or ‘the grift.’
You can and should be doing this for yourself. Sure, we’d love to help. But we’d really love to see you thrive and survive.
To help brands navigate this shift, we use a structured pathway to surface what the ‘new normals’ mean to your growth marketing and eCommerce structure. They will help you and your business now.
Experience has shown us that focusing purely on marketing metrics limits our vision. Instead, we look at the entire commercial growth system.
Here are the five areas we believe matter most when wider economics become unpredictable.
1.Unit Economics Resilience
Do you still make money when conditions worsen?
Brands tend to know their margins in ‘normal’ conditions. Far fewer know how sensitive they are to change.
Key questions:
- What happens to product level and total profit if shipping costs rise 10-15%?
- Which SKUs turn unprofitable first? The heavy ones? The products shipping to certain locations or with free / discounted shipping?
- Are acquisition targets tied to profit contribution, or just ROAS?
Resilient brands manage performance at a product contribution and margin level. Blending the average can be like deliberately adding fog to a sunny day.
2. Fulfilment & Cost Exposure
How much control do you have over delivery costs?
Fuel volatility hits ecommerce hardest through fulfilment.
Warning signs include:
- Shipping costs creeping toward unsustainable % of AOV
- Heavy products driving disproportionate cost-to-margin ratio
- “Free” next‑day delivery treated as a default expectation. This can be turned into a brand supportive message if managed correctly
Brands that cope best with these topics simplify options, introduce smarter thresholds, and communicate delivery value transparently.
3. Demand Quality & Revenue Predictability
How stable is your revenue if acquisition gets harder?
When paid media becomes more expensive, resilience comes from customers who come back and have higher LTV.
Important data points:
- Percentage of revenue from returning customers
- Time to second purchase as a target metric
- Contribution from email, SMS, and owned channels
Retention isn’t just a growth lever, it’s a risk‑reduction strategy.
4. Channel & Media Volatility
How robust is your growth engine?
Many eCommerce brands are more exposed than they realise:
- Over‑dependence on one or two channels
- Static CPA targets despite rising costs
- Accepting performance swings as a ‘fact of life’ when they actually make forecasting more difficult and should be properly interrogated
Resilient strategies balance efficiency with predictability and accept that not all growth is equal.
5. Decision‑Making Under Pressure
Can the business make calm, data rationalised decisions when conditions change?
This is often one the most overlooked factor.
In volatile environments, businesses fail not because of one bad month, but because of reactive decisions:
- Panic discounting
- Abrupt budget cuts or over‑spending in unprofitable acquisition areas
- Short‑term fixes that damage long‑term economics
Remember. Measure twice, cut once.