SV_O1_SUPPLY_STRAIN — Something Is Breaking
Quick Insight
Delivery problems are decision problems wearing overalls. Fix the promise, the process or the capacity before trust starts leaking.
Why This Decision Matters
Delivery choices decide whether promises survive real customers, real stock, real suppliers and real timing. They determine trust, refunds, reviews, repeat business and the founder’s ability to sleep without listening for imaginary complaint emails. The reader identifies operational fragility before customers experience it.
What Changes If You Get This Wrong
Customers may lose trust, refunds may increase and the business may start spending tomorrow’s capacity fixing yesterday’s promises.
Decision Archetype
Polite Drift: avoiding a difficult quality or promise conversation until the customer forces it into the open.
Core Options
- Reset the promise with the customer.
- Fix the process behind the failure.
- Stop selling what the business cannot yet deliver reliably.
Key Trade-offs
- Keeping the sale versus protecting trust.
- Fixing symptoms versus changing the promise.
- Speed versus quality.
Real-World Patterns
Small delivery failures often start quietly: a late reply, a vague promise, a missing note, a rushed dispatch. The earlier the business names the pattern, the less dramatic the fix has to be.
Deeper Considerations
When delivery slips, separate intent from system. Most founders are not trying to disappoint customers. They are often making promises that the current process, supplier base or capacity cannot reliably support.
Practical Decision Lens
Start with the section exercise:
Map the fulfilment process and mark every point where delay, quality failure or missing information could affect the customer.
Then ask:
- What promise is being made?
- Can the current system keep it reliably?
- What must change before selling more?
UK-Specific Considerations
Supplier payment terms and customer refund expectations affect cashflow. Operational problems are rarely just operational.
Related Decisions
Further Reading
- Business records if you’re self-employed — GOV.UK / HMRC
- A Guide to Payment Rights for Small Businesses — Small Business Commissioner