SFP works best for certain product types.
Here are the 7 clean fits:
Apparel and footwear.
Custom kits and bundles.
Seasonal and holiday lines.
Slow movers and big ticket goods.
High value electronics and appliances.
Fast-changing or short shelf-life products.
And finally, heavy, bulky, oversized items.
Because the bigger the item gets,
the more SFP becomes inevitable.
Why this works:
You avoid storage and special handling costs.
You keep the unboxing on brand.
You cut stranded inventory risk.
Prime badge lifts conversions.
ShipSage makes the fit work:
We stage stock near demand.
We add weekend carrier lanes.
We use multiple nodes in peak season.
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15 days ago
Spot on about SFP being a game-changer for bulky and high-value SKUs. We see a lot of companies get burned by extra handling and stranded inventory fees when they try to force these items through generic fulfillment. Local staging is underrated - especially when peak season hits and everyone's scrambling for carrier capacity. Have you noticed any product category that's been surprisingly hard to make profitable with SFP?