Tariffs have been around for centuries. Commonly used to protect emerging industries or bolster national security, tariffs have evolved beyond trade tools into economic levers that can shift markets overnight. Tariffs have re-entered the conversation for mid-sized business leaders, especially those with global supply chains or international customer bases. But here's the thing: reacting like it’s still 1995 won’t cut it.
Today’s tariff environment is more far-reaching , less predictable, and increasingly amplified by global supply dynamics. It’s not just the tariff itself that matters—it’s the perception of instability, the upstream supplier reactions, and the downstream ripple effects that touch pricing, production, and customer relationships.
Industries like industrial manufacturing, electronics, construction, consumer goods, and textiles are experiencing increased cost pressures. But that’s just the start. If your business uses raw materials, sources components from abroad, or sells into tariff-affected sectors, you're exposed—directly or indirectly.
Let’s not forget the less obvious players: service providers that install, integrate, or support tariffed goods, retailers relying on imported products, or even contractors dealing with material price hikes. It’s a domino effect. Suddenly, go-to-market assumptions from a year ago are outdated.
Tariffs erode predictability. And predictability is fuel for a solid go-to-market strategy. Forecasts become fuzzier, pricing strategies wobble, and the sales team is left fielding difficult questions without clear guidance.
To respond, you need more than a spreadsheet. You need cross-functional awareness—operations, finance, marketing, and sales must all align on the implications and responses. That’s where many mid-sized firms falter. They treat tariffs as a procurement issue, not a strategic one.
It’s tempting to only look inward when costs start climbing. But consider this: are your competitors hit harder than you? Are they passing on costs while you hold steady? That’s not just a difference—it’s a market opportunity.
Understanding relative impact lets you shift from defense to offense. And that starts with insight: how are others reacting, and how can your strategy play the long game instead of the panic game?
For manufacturers, insight is your entry point into a more thoughtful response. Here are concrete steps to take:
In part 2 of our series on tariffs, we'll dig into what sellers can do right now to protect their margins and retain customer trust—without falling into the all-too-common pricing trap.
Topics: Business Growth Strategy, Manufacturing, Industrial
Mon, Apr 7, 2025