
Influencer marketing, social media commerce and cultural movements are transforming retail. Trends-led sales spikes can appear out of almost nowhere, creating new pressures for stock inventory management and fulfilment.
Andrew Scanlon from Paxon – a newly formed third-party logistics brand created by bringing together three specialist providers: Active Ants, Staci and Radial, looks at how retailers and consumer brands can capitalise on ‘perpetual peaks’
Sudden surges in demand
Senior retail leaders are gathering at Deliver Europe 2026 to look at what’s shaping the future of retail supply chains, and a hot topic of conversation is trends-led sales. This is becoming more of a priority, as traditional seasonal sales cycles and peaks like Christmas continue to flatten or stretch.
So-called ‘micro seasons’ have impacted the timing and intensity of conventional retail peaks, with events such as Amazon Prime Day, Prime Big Deal Days, Black Friday and Cyber Monday shifting consumer spending patterns. However, this disruption pre-dates these events. The rise of e-commerce and an increasingly competitive retail landscape had already begun to erode traditional seasonality. End-of-season sales began stretching across seasons, while deep discounting and money-off promotions have become year-round occurrences.
Now, attention is turning to the rise of ‘perpetual peaks’ – frequent, often sudden surges in demand, which can be trigged in an instant by influencers, cultural moments and social media momentum. Examples such as Taylor Swift’s global Eras Tour and the ripple effects of ‘Swiftonomics’, the Stanley Cup becoming an overnight must-have, the spike in pink apparel and accessories driven by the Barbie movie, and the record-breaking viral success of P.Louise Cosmetics, all highlight how trends-led demand is reshaping retail sales and supply chains.
Predictive orchestration
Addressing both the challenges and opportunities of ‘perpetual peaks’ means that retailers and brands must build agile fulfilment ecosystems. Such models balance inventory management to ensure products are readily available to satisfy sudden demand, while also avoiding the risks of overstocking.
Predictive orchestration is an advanced technological approach, which can bring together real-time data, webshops, machine learning and Artificial Intelligence (AI) to coordinate and model workflows. Fulfilment strategies and decisions will continuously adapt, rather than remaining static, to prioritise high-margin or high-demand orders, optimise stock replenishment and redirect inventory based on demand signals.
Fulfilment systems can utilise real-time data, ranging from sales through to social listening tools and marketing forecasts to help build elastic capacity. Systems, labour, supply chain partnerships and stock inventory can be scaled up or down quickly, in response to peaks and troughs. Data analysis can also be used to organise – and continuously reposition – inventory in fulfilment centres to ensure products are readily accessible when they’re most in demand. This can save valuable time during sales surges, when products need to move in and out of warehouses seamlessly to minimise bottlenecks.
Trends-led sales and the rise of ‘perpetual peaks’ are reshaping supply chain management and fulfilment strategies, with shorter lead times to process higher volumes of inventory becoming more commonplace. The growing popularity of social commerce, alongside more frictionless shopping experiences and growing consumer expectations for immediacy, all imply that this dynamic won’t slow in the near future. Fulfilment strategies will need to evolve to anticipate, absorb and satisfy demand when it happens, and rapidly refresh, so that processes can quickly move from one peak to the next.
Click here for more information about adapting fulfilment strategies to capitalise on trends-led sales.







