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Your landed cost has crept up 18% in two years. Freight did some of it, the exchange rate did some of it, and your supplier’s “small annual adjustment” did the rest. So you raised prices, trimmed the ad budget, and told yourself that is just what scaling feels like in 2026.

Here is the part that stings. Research from Ardent Partners shows that businesses which actively manage their supplier spend save 6 to 12 cents in every dollar. The average procurement team banks 6.7% in savings every single year. Your store almost certainly has no procurement team. Which means nobody has ever properly negotiated the single biggest expense line in your business.

After working with hundreds of Aussie Shopify founders, we see the same pattern constantly: founders will rebuild their whole funnel to win 0.3% of conversion, but will not send one email that could take 10% off their cost of goods. This playbook fixes that. Five levers, one call structure, and the exact scripts to use.

Why Founders Pull Every Lever Except This One

Most founders never negotiate with suppliers for two reasons, and neither of them survives contact with reality.

“I’m too small to matter.” You are not negotiating with BHP. Your factory is usually a 30 to 200 person operation where a customer spending $150,000 a year is a real account. Losing you costs them real money, and replacing a reliable, repeat-ordering customer is as hard for them as replacing a good supplier is for you.

“I’ll damage the relationship.” The opposite is true. Suppliers respect customers who run their business professionally. A structured conversation about price, terms and volume signals that you plan to be around in five years. What damages relationships is the thing founders actually do: silently switching factories over a price rise they never pushed back on.

The founders inside our community who treat supplier negotiation as an annual discipline, the same way they treat pricing reviews, consistently pull 5 to 15% out of COGS over a couple of rounds. On a store doing $1.5m at a 38% cost of goods, a 10% reduction is $57,000 a year that drops straight to the bottom line. No new customers required.

Lever 1: Walk Into the Call Knowing Your Numbers Cold

Negotiating without data is begging. Negotiating with data is business. Before you ask for anything, you need four numbers for every supplier: total annual spend, spend by SKU, landed cost trend over 24 months, and what share of your total COGS that supplier represents.

Supplier spend dashboard showing spend by supplier and landed cost trend
Spend by supplier and a 24-month landed cost trend: the two views you need open before any supplier conversation.

The fastest way to get this data is a purchasing tool that sits on top of Shopify. We use Inventory Planner with members for exactly this job. Setting it up takes an afternoon:

While you are in there, check your demand forecast. Your forecast is your negotiation ammunition, because every lever below depends on you credibly committing to future volume. If your forecasting is guesswork, fix that first with our inventory forecasting playbook, then come back.

Lever 2: The Unit Price Conversation (Volume Tiers Beat Haggling)

Never ask “can you do a better price?” That question invites a 2% token discount and ends the conversation. Strong unit price negotiation is structured around volume tiers and commitment, not haggling.

Ask your supplier to quote three tiers: your current annual volume, 30% above it, and 60% above it. Factories price on production run efficiency, so the gaps between tiers are often 6 to 12% per unit. Then negotiate to lock the middle tier price against your forecast commitment, paid order by order. You get tomorrow’s price on today’s volume, they get a customer who has signalled growth in writing.

Three more unit price moves that work in the real world:

Lever 3: Payment Terms, the Lever That Funds Your Growth

Unit price gets all the attention, but payment terms are usually worth more to a growing store. Here is why: Australian SMEs wait an average of 35.4 days to get paid by their large business customers, according to the Payment Times Reporting Regulator’s 2025 data. Meanwhile most founders are paying suppliers 30% up front and 70% before the stock even ships. You are being paid slowly and paying fast. That gap is why growth feels like a cash crisis.

The cost of that squeeze is real. 2025 survey data found 17% of Australian SMEs are losing more than $2,500 a month to late payments and cash flow gaps, up from 11% the year before. Every day of payment terms you win from a supplier directly closes that gap, interest free.

Supplier payment terms negotiation tracker spreadsheet with status per supplier
A simple terms tracker keeps every ask deliberate: one ask per supplier per round, biggest spend first.

Move in steps, not leaps. The progression that works:

One member running a homewares brand moved her main factory from 30/70-on-shipment to 30/70 Net 30 after three years of orders. On her PO cycle that freed roughly $54,000 of working capital. That is an entire quarter of ad spend she no longer needs to borrow or pre-fund.

Lever 4: MOQs and the Flexibility Trade

Minimum order quantities are where factories protect themselves and where founders quietly drown. Order the full MOQ on a product that misses and you do not just lose the order value, you lose the months of cash that dead stock sits on.

The counterintuitive play, straight from Shopify’s own MOQ negotiation guidance: offer to pay more per unit for a smaller run. Around 15% more per unit for half the MOQ is a fair opening position. It feels wrong until you run the cash maths.

MOQ scenario planner comparing three order quantities by cash and stock cover
Same product, three order structures. The negotiated half MOQ costs more per unit and leaves the most cash in the business.

Other MOQ structures to put on the table:

Lever 5: The Leverage You Already Have (Commitment and a Credible Plan B)

Every negotiation runs on alternatives. Yours is the credible ability to move some production elsewhere. Theirs is the credible ability to replace your volume. Strengthen the first and you change every conversation above.

This is now mainstream practice, not paranoia. A McKinsey supply chain survey found 73% of companies are actively progressing dual-sourcing strategies, and IDC projects half of all firms will split orders across multiple regions rather than rely on a single low-cost hub. The big end of town is doing it because single-factory dependence showed its cost during every freight crisis of the last five years.

For a Shopify brand the move is simple: qualify a second factory with one small SKU. A 5% slice of your volume is enough. You learn their quality, they appear on your supplier list, and your main factory knows they exist. You never need to threaten anything. The line “we are consolidating our FY27 sourcing plan” carries all the weight on its own.

The flip side of leverage is commitment, and Australian brands use it at every scale. LSKD, the Queensland activewear brand now turning over more than $200 million a year, signed a 10-year supply partnership with materials company Samsara Eco to lock in recycled nylon for its core range. A decade of committed demand bought them supply security and priority on an input their competitors will queue for. Koala went the other direction with its sofa range, onshoring production to Australia to shorten lead times and cut its exposure to international freight swings. Different strategies, same principle: deliberate supplier structure as a competitive weapon.

You do not need a 10-year deal. A written 12-month rolling forecast, shared quarterly, is the small-brand version, and factories reward it.

The Negotiation Call Itself: Sequence, Script and the Email That Opens the Door

Do not ambush your supplier on a production call. Book the conversation properly, two to three weeks before your next PO, with an email like this:

“Hi Wei, we’re planning our FY27 orders and [brand] is forecasting 30 to 40% growth with you. Before we lock the plan, I’d like 30 minutes to review pricing tiers, payment terms and minimums so the structure works for both sides for the next 12 months. Would Tuesday or Wednesday your time suit?”

Notice what that email does. It frames the conversation around growth, signals a 12-month relationship, and names the three levers without demanding anything. On the call itself, follow a fixed sequence:

One ask per supplier per round. Run a round every six months. The tracker does not need to be fancy, it needs to exist.

How the Five Levers Compound

Here is where this stops being a cost exercise and becomes a growth system. Take a store doing $1.2m with $420,000 of supplier spend. Round one of negotiation lands modest wins: 6% off unit costs on the main factory, balance payment moved from shipment to Net 30, and the hero SKU MOQ halved.

The 6% is worth about $15,000 a year in straight profit. The terms shift frees roughly $50,000 of working capital each cycle, which funds ad spend or the next product without debt. The halved MOQ means new colourways launch with half the risk, so you test twice as many. Each lever feeds the others: better cash funds bigger orders, bigger orders earn better tiers, better tiers widen the margin that funds the next test. That is the flywheel, and it started with one scheduled phone call.

The Five Mistakes That Blow Up Supplier Negotiations

We have watched plenty of founders walk into these conversations with good data and still come out worse off. The failure modes are predictable, so build the guardrails in advance.

None of this requires aggression. The founders who get the best supplier outcomes are usually the calmest people in the room, because they did the preparation in Lever 1 and they know exactly what the account is worth to both sides.

Your Supplier Negotiation Checklist

Steal this for your next round. Thirty minutes of prep per supplier, run twice a year:

Inside eCommerce Circle, supplier structure is one of the levers we work on with every member scaling past seven figures, because the cheapest growth capital in your business is the money already leaking out of your cost of goods. If you want a second opinion on your numbers before your next supplier call, let’s talk.

The Shopify Supplier Negotiation Playbook: The 5-Lever System Aussie DTC Founders Use to Cut COGS 10 to 15% (Without Switching Factories or Burning the Relationship)
Paul Warren

Written by

Paul Warren

Helping Shopify brand owners scale smarter through the eCommerce Circle coaching community.

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