Your Buyer Has a Supply-Chain Strategy and No Way to Run It — That Gap Is Your Best 2026 GTM Wedge
Most of the supply-chain coverage this year has told the same story: tariffs are permanent, sourcing is regionalizing, reshoring is accelerating. All true. But there is a quieter finding buried in the 2026 data that matters more for how you sell, and almost nobody is building a go-to-market motion around it. The strategy has outrun the execution. Your buyers know what they need to do. Most of them cannot actually do it yet — and that gap is where deals are won this year.
The number that should reframe your pipeline
Three-quarters of retail supply-chain leaders say tariff turbulence is redefining their 2026 strategy. They are diversifying sourcing, layering domestic and nearshore suppliers, and 93% are spreading their footprint within Asia to cut single-country exposure. The intent is real and well-funded.
Then comes the execution number. 84% of retail supply-chain leaders say they struggle to align their IT infrastructure for multinode fulfillment. Read that again. The overwhelming majority have a regionalization strategy their own systems cannot support. They have committed to a layered, multi-supplier, multi-node model — and their ERP, their visibility tools, and their logistics integrations were built for a single-source, just-in-time world that no longer exists.
This is not a temporary glitch. It is the defining condition of the 2026 buyer. They are mid-transition, operating a new strategy on old infrastructure, and they feel the friction every day. Thomson Reuters’ trade data underscores how committed they are to the new model — 76% of trade professionals now treat the current tariff regime as permanent — which means the execution gap is not going to resolve itself by waiting it out.
Why this changes how you sell, not just what you sell
Every seller knows how to sell to a clear, well-formed need. The supply-chain execution gap is the opposite: it is a buyer who has the strategy fully formed and the capability missing. That asymmetry should change three things in your motion.
First, your discovery questions. Stop asking buyers what their supply-chain strategy is — they will recite it fluently, because they have said it in every board meeting this year. Start asking what is breaking when they try to run it. Where does visibility drop off between nodes? Which supplier onboarding still takes weeks? What manual workaround is holding a multinode process together? The pain lives in the execution layer, and that is where your differentiation has to land.
Second, your proof. A buyer drowning in a strategy-execution gap does not want a vision deck — they have their own. They want evidence that you have closed this specific gap for someone like them. Case studies should be reframed around transition — “here is a company that was mid-regionalization with fragmented systems, and here is what working looked like ninety days later.” That is a far stronger asset than a generic capabilities pitch.
Third, your deal structure. Buyers in transition cannot absorb a long, all-at-once implementation; they are already running a strategy their systems half-support. Land with a scoped first phase that fixes one painful node or one broken handoff, prove it, then expand. Shorter initial commitments also fit the reality that these buyers are still discovering what their new operating model actually requires.
The accounts to prioritize
Re-sort your pipeline by one question: which accounts have publicly committed to a sourcing or regionalization shift but show signs their systems have not caught up? Those are your fastest deals — the gap is widest, the pain is sharpest, and there is rarely an incumbent vendor who owns the transition. Accounts that have either not started the shift, or have already completed it, are slower and more competitive.
If you want a steady read on how supply-chain and trade shifts reshape the buyer — written for operators and founders rather than logistics analysts — bookmark TrendInsightsJournal.com. It tracks the second-order effects of trends like reshoring, so you can build a GTM motion around where buyers actually struggle instead of where the headlines point.
The takeaway: in 2026 your buyer’s bottleneck is not deciding what to do — it is being able to do it. Sell to the execution gap, and you are selling to the part of the problem they cannot solve alone.
Sources: Thomson Reuters, edhat / Stacker, DHL, Global Trade Magazine