Why Marketplace Growth is Becoming an Operations Problem, Not a Marketing Problem
For years, marketplace growth was largely viewed through a listing and marketing lens. Brands focused on ensuring listings were live, keyword optimization, sponsored ads, ratings, reviews, and creative content to win visibility on platforms like Amazon.com, Walmart, and Target. Marketplace success often came down to who could outbid competitors for attention and convert shoppers more efficiently.
That dynamic is changing.
Today, many brands aren’t struggling because consumers can’t find their products. They’re struggling because operational complexity is outpacing their ability to scale. In fact, marketplaces now account for more than 80 percent of global e-commerce gross merchandise value (GMV), underscoring just how central platforms like Amazon, Walmart, and Target Plus have become to modern retail growth. At the same time, consumer expectations around speed and convenience have never been higher: a recent study found 74 percent of shoppers expect delivery within two days or less, along with seamless returns and real-time inventory accuracy.
Marketplace growth has evolved into an operations challenge, where backend execution determines whether brands can sustain profitability, maintain customer trust, and compete effectively across channels. Success now belongs to brands that operationalize growth as aggressively as they market it.
That means shipping speed is as important, if not more, than marketing levers.
Marketplace Expansion Creates Operational Strain
As brands expand across multiple marketplaces, they quickly encounter a new reality: every channel operates differently. Each marketplace has unique fulfillment expectations, inventory requirements, return policies, fee structures, compliance standards, and customer service metrics. Managing several simultaneously introduces a level of operational coordination many brands weren’t originally built to support.
The challenge becomes especially apparent at scale. Inventory that isn’t synchronized across channels can lead to overselling or stockouts. Forecasting errors can leave brands paying storage penalties on one platform while missing demand on another. Returns become harder to process consistently.
The consequences of falling short are significant. Nearly 70 percent of consumers say they are unlikely to shop with a retailer again after a single poor delivery experience. Meanwhile, marketplaces continue raising performance expectations. Amazon and other major marketplaces continue tightening seller performance requirements around fulfillment speed, inventory accuracy, and customer experience, making operational execution increasingly critical to maintaining visibility and growth.
That means operational performance has direct impacts across the board from discoverability, seller rankings, and conversion rates to brand reputation and long-term revenue growth.
Operational Visibility is Becoming a Growth Driver
Brands can no longer afford to operate channels in disparate silos. They need a unified view of inventory, demand forecasting, fulfillment performance, advertising efficiency, and profitability across marketplaces. Without that, decision-making becomes reactive instead of strategic. A brand may see strong sales growth in one marketplace while fulfillment costs or return rates erode margins behind the scenes. Another may aggressively invest in advertising, which is often around 20 percent of gross sales on major marketplaces, without realizing that inventory constraints will prevent it from capitalizing on increased demand.
The brands succeeding today are investing in inventory synchronization, stronger forecasting models, distributed fulfillment strategies and systems that provide real-time insight into channel performance.
Profitability Matters More Than Pure Growth
The marketplace environment has also become less forgiving than it was during the rapid e-commerce expansion of the last several years. Why? Because of consumer demand, economic turmoil and the need for speed. Brands are facing higher fulfillment costs, rising advertising expenses, increased competitive pressure, and tighter consumer spending. Returns alone represent a staggering $890 billion annually, nearly 17 percent of total retail sales, with the vast majority of those losses absorbed out-of-pocket by merchants. Simply growing gross sales is no longer enough.
Marketplace growth is now about building the operational infrastructure necessary to support increasingly complex commerce ecosystems. Brands that continue treating operations as a back-office function risk falling behind those that elevate operational execution into a core strategic capability. That means investing in cross-channel coordination, real-time visibility, fulfillment optimization, forecasting accuracy, and scalable infrastructure. In today’s marketplace, the question is not only whether consumers want your products. It’s whether your operations can keep up with the demand.
Owen Carr is chief merchandising officer at Spreetail, the leading e-commerce marketplace accelerator, where he oversees strategic partnerships, drives revenue growth, and builds the community.
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- Marketplaces
- Order Fulfillment
Owen Carr is Chief Merchandising Officer at Spreetail, the leading ecommerce marketplace accelerator, where he oversees strategic partnerships, drives revenue growth and build sthe community. As a leader at Spreetail, Owen's mission is twofold: (1) Simplify and scale online sales for our brand partners and (2) Support Spreetailers and their families by fostering an inclusive and nurturing work environment. Owen has over 10 years of experience in project management and ecommerce, specializing in merchandising at CPO Commerce before joining Spreetail.




