More growth, less effort.
Scale fulfillment, shipping, and warehousing with a platform that brings everything together.
Get started
Isabelle Agalarov
Isabelle Agalarov
Content & Marketing expert with focus on eCom & logistics

Logistics out of control? Insights from the UNHYDE podcast

4/13/2026

5 mins reading time

Logistics out of control? Insights from the UNHYDE podcast

In a recent episode of the UNHYDE podcast, our Co-Founder Johannes Tress shares what actually changes in this phase, and why many eCommerce brands start running into structural challenges long before they realize it.

This article breaks down those patterns and explains where control is typically lost - and what distinguishes setups that scale from those that don’t.

Our Co-Founder Johannes Tress was recently a guest on the UNHYDE podcast, where he spoke about a topic many eCommerce brands only fully understand once it becomes critical: logistics.

One pattern became clear throughout the conversation.

Logistics tends to stay invisible for a long time. As long as orders arrive on time and processes run smoothly, it is rarely questioned. That is exactly where many brands develop a false sense of control.

Because the moment something stops working, logistics becomes immediately visible. And at that point, it is no longer an operational detail - it becomes part of the customer experience.

How simple setups work for a long time

In early stages, logistics is rarely a bottleneck. A single warehouse, one fulfillment partner, and manageable volumes are usually enough to run operations reliably.

Decisions can be made quickly because all relevant information is available. Inventory is clearly assigned, and the question of where an order should be shipped from barely comes up.

The system appears stable, even though it is simply operating with low complexity.

The critical transition for scaling brands

As companies grow, this reality changes.

New markets are added, additional warehouse locations are set up, and each new logistics partner increases the number of dependencies. At the same time, expectations around delivery speed and service continue to rise.

In the podcast, Johannes describes this exact moment: operational reality evolves faster than the structure designed to support it.

Where control is lost in day-to-day operations

Loss of control rarely happens in a single moment. As discussed in the conversation, it is a gradual shift: operational complexity increases, while the underlying structure stays the same.

In practice, this becomes very tangible.

Once multiple warehouses, systems, and partners are involved, data no longer flows cleanly. Inventory is managed across different systems, updates are delayed, and there is no single, reliable view of actual availability.

As a result, decisions are no longer clearly controlled.

An order might be shipped from a warehouse in Germany, even though inventory is already available closer to the customer. Not because this decision was made intentionally, but because the transparency required to make the right decision is missing.

The same applies to inventory. A product may appear available in the system, even though it is not actually ready to be shipped. This is often caused by delayed updates, missing synchronization between systems, or inconsistent data structures.

These issues do not occur randomly.

They accumulate as more markets, more warehouses, and more partners are added - increasing the number of dependencies while decision logic remains unchanged.

What worked in a simple setup becomes increasingly unreliable under these conditions.

Teams start reacting to individual issues instead of managing the system as a whole.

The reason operational effort increases with growth

As complexity increases, the way teams work also changes. What used to be decided directly is now replaced by coordination.

Teams align across multiple partners, manually reconcile data, and build temporary solutions to compensate for missing transparency. In many cases, Excel-based workarounds emerge just to track inventory or shipment status.

The system still functions - but no longer on its own.

It works because additional effort is continuously applied.

Understanding how growth exposes these issues

One key takeaway from the conversation is that growth itself is not the problem. It simply exposes what already exists in the system.

This becomes especially visible during peak periods. When volume and customer expectations increase at the same time, even small inefficiencies start to have noticeable effects.

Routing decisions that are slightly inefficient in everyday operations can lead to systematic delays. Lack of transparency slows down decision-making precisely when speed matters most.

What could previously be compensated becomes a bottleneck under pressure.

The role of data as the real foundation

The podcast also highlights a common misconception: many companies look for solutions in new tools or automation.

In practice, these approaches often fail because of the underlying data.

If inventory is displayed differently across systems or there is no consistent view of orders and fulfillment, even highly specialized solutions cannot deliver reliable results. Forecasts become inaccurate, and automated decisions lead to errors.

The issue is not the tool - it is the lack of structured data.

What structured logistics looks like

Companies that successfully navigate this phase do not just optimize individual processes - they change their entire approach.

They create a central view of their logistics, where inventory, orders, and fulfillment data come together. Decisions are no longer made in isolation, but based on a consistent and reliable information foundation.

At the same time, logistics is treated as a network rather than a set of isolated locations. Orders are no longer fulfilled “somewhere,” but intentionally from the location that best balances delivery time, cost, and availability.

As a result, operational work changes. Teams spend less time coordinating and more time managing.

Conclusion: logistics becomes a management function

A key pattern from the conversation is the shift in the role of logistics.

What works operationally in early stages becomes a management challenge as complexity increases.

For scaling eCommerce brands, this means that success is not determined by volume, but by the ability to structure and control complexity.

In the end, it is not about processing more orders.

It is about consistently understanding what is happening within the system - and making the right decisions based on that understanding.

This shift is discussed in more detail in the UNHYDE Podcast. [German]

Frequently asked questions

Why does logistics suddenly become a problem for scaling eCommerce businesses?

How can eCommerce brands regain control over their logistics?

About the author

Isabelle Agalarov

Content & Marketing expert with focus on eCom & logistics

Isabelle Agalarov contributes to the creation and development of content at everstox, focusing on eCommerce, logistics, and fulfillment. Her work centers on translating complex topics into clear, structured content with practical business relevance.

As part of her studies in Marketing & Digital Media at FOM University of Applied Sciences in Munich, Isabelle focuses on digital business models, content strategies, and data-driven marketing. She complements this academic foundation with hands-on experience in content creation, social media, and the management and optimization of digital platforms.

Her profile is further strengthened by prior experience in content-related roles, as well as her vocational training as an automotive business administrator and her work at BMW Group. There, she developed a strong understanding of customer needs, communication, and target audience-oriented messaging.

Her approach is centered on creating content that is clear, structured, and accessible. The focus lies on presenting relevant eCommerce and logistics topics in a way that remains easy to understand while maintaining strong practical relevance.

Learn more

More interesting articles

Fulfillment vs. growth – insights from the  abscale podcast

Founder Insights

6 mins

reading time

Fulfillment vs. growth – insights from the abscale podcast

As eCommerce brands grow, fulfillment setups that once worked often start to show their limits.

Not because operations fail - but because complexity increases and the underlying model doesn’t evolve with it.

This is exactly what Johannes Tress discusses in the abscale podcast, and why many fulfillment setups reach a point where they no longer scale.

Isabelle Agalarov

Isabelle Agalarov

4/16/2026

Artikel lesen
Customs documents: how to avoid delays and in international trade

General

12 mins

reading time

Customs documents: how to avoid delays and in international trade

Your goods are packed, the carrier is booked, and the customer abroad is waiting for delivery – and suddenly everything comes to a halt. The reason: the shipment gets stuck in customs clearance. For eCommerce merchants and fulfillment providers, this is a worst-case scenario. It means delivery delays, unexpected storage fees, penalties, and frustrated customers.

The good news: many of these risks can be avoided with clear processes and complete customs documents – especially when all required documents are fully prepared and accurate.

This guide gives you a practical overview of which documents matter for export, how to avoid errors on the commercial invoice, and how automated customs declarations make your international growth scalable – from understanding liabilities to digital process optimization. Clean customs documentation is crucial in every section of the workflow, across any operational area.

Anna Kraus

Anna Kraus

12/3/2025

Artikel lesen
Mastering seasonal peaks: how multi-warehousing helps prevent bottlenecks

General

10 mins

reading time

Mastering seasonal peaks: how multi-warehousing helps prevent bottlenecks

Your marketing campaigns for Black Friday or the holiday season are running at full speed, the servers handle the traffic, orders skyrocket – and then everything stops. Not in your shop, but in the warehouse. When parcels remain stuck, throughput times explode and customers wait for their orders, the “logistics blackout” becomes reality.

A single warehouse location quickly turns into a “single point of failure” during peak season fulfillment. The solution for growing eCommerce and online retailers isn’t a bigger central warehouse, but flexibility: a strategy built on multi-warehousing.

This article shows you why decentralized warehousing has become essential in modern eCommerce. We break down the hidden risks of centralization, highlight the strategic advantages of a multi-warehousing setup and offer a clear guide on how to elevate your inventory management through automation and the right partner network.

Anna Kraus

Anna Kraus

12/3/2025

Artikel lesen
View all articles