Client case · Multi-warehouse coordination
A policy change gave one of our large US e-commerce clients a hard deadline: move the entire West Coast inventory to East Coast warehouses without interrupting sales. This page breaks down how that emergency warehouse transfer actually ran — what we activated, in what order, and what it protected. No theory, just the operating steps, so you can judge whether your current fulfillment setup could do the same.

The situation
A policy change with a hard deadline
Sudden policy and channel changes meant the client’s US inventory could no longer ship from its West Coast locations. Every sellable unit had to move east. Orders were still coming in. Ad campaigns were still running. The deadline was not negotiable.
If you have run a store through a factory shutdown or a sudden carrier change, you know how this usually goes: orders keep landing, nothing ships, and the only advice you get is to wait. You pause your ads, refund customers one by one, and absorb the loss. Disruptions like this are exactly what a fulfillment partner should be built for — most simply are not.
The client was facing stockouts, sales disruption, and potential losses running into the millions. What they had on their side: their stock was already sitting inside our multi-warehouse network, tracked in one system.
Our approach
How the transfer ran, step by step
Coordination system activated immediately
Every carton already lived in one system — locations, quantities, open orders. There was no discovery phase and no spreadsheet reconciliation. Planning started the moment the client briefed us.
All sellable inventory mobilized
We mobilized every unit across our US warehouses — not a partial move, not a “ship what we can” compromise. The transfer plan covered the client’s full US stock.
Orders kept flowing during the move
Open orders were re-routed to whichever warehouse could still ship them. Store integrations stayed live throughout, so orders kept confirming, picking, and tracking as normal.
Costs managed inside the emergency
Re-allocation was also a chance to fix routing. The new placement reduced warehousing and last-mile shipping costs, rather than adding an emergency premium on top of the disruption.

The results
What it protected
Stockouts avoided
Listings stayed live and sales operations remained stable through the entire move.
Millions protected
Potential losses from halted sales and stranded inventory were prevented.
Full transfer, on deadline
The complete US inventory was re-positioned coast to coast inside the committed window.
Why this worked
Why a warehouse network changes the math
This case was not heroics. It was infrastructure doing what it is designed to do. Three mechanisms made an emergency feel routine:
Warehouses on three continents
Stock in China, the US, and Europe means no single building, port, or policy decides whether you can ship. US and EU orders deliver in 5–10 days from local stock. Contingency capacity is built into our global warehousing network, not bolted on.
One coordination layer
Inventory, orders, and tracking live in one system across every warehouse. That turns a transfer into an operations task with a checklist — not a crisis with a hotline.
A named account manager
You work with a dedicated account manager who replies in under an hour during business hours. In an emergency, that is the difference between acting today and queuing behind a ticket number.

FAQ
Questions brands ask about emergency transfers
Can inventory move between US warehouses without fulfillment stopping?
Yes — that is the point of running warehousing and fulfillment in one system. Open orders re-route to whichever location can ship them while stock is in motion. In this case, sales operations stayed stable through the entire transfer.
What does an emergency transfer cost?
It is quoted before anything moves — itemized by volume, distance, and timeline, in writing. In this case the re-allocation reduced warehousing and last-mile costs rather than adding a premium. Qualified brands can also work on net-60 / net-90 payment terms.
What about planned disruptions, like factory holidays or peak season?
The same network absorbs them. Because stock sits in US and European warehouses, fulfillment continues while production in China pauses. We plan buffer stock ahead of known shutdowns and watch daily volumes with you through peak season.
Stress-test your contingency plan before you need it
Tell us how your inventory is positioned today and where a single point of failure could stall your sales. A dedicated account manager replies in under an hour during business hours; quote and form submissions get a full reply within 24 hours.