As the Black Friday countdown begins, the e-commerce seller community is seeing a dramatic split. Some sellers are already hitting the bestseller lists with explosive growth, while many others are staring at a sudden, cliff-like drop in sales.
This isn't random. It's the result of several new, powerful trends converging at once. This year's peak season is not a "lay-up" — it's a new game with new rules.
Here is what's really going on.
This year, "peak season" is a two-month-long marathon, not a weekend sprint.
This "war of attrition" has a major side-effect: it trains consumers to wait.
Buyers know that another, "better" deal is always just a few days away. This creates a pre-Black Friday slump where ad costs pile up, but consumers refuse to convert, holding out for the absolute lowest price.
Only "no-brainer" categories like gifts, holiday-themed items, and home decor are seeing an early, natural lift, while other categories are experiencing a painful sales delay.
For some sellers, the sales drop isn't just about consumer trends—it's a direct result of new regulations.
Amazon has announced a strict new compliance rule for all toy sellers: EN 71 and EN 62115 safety reports must now be uploaded directly by the testing lab to Amazon's backend.
This seemingly small change has massive consequences:
One toy seller reported a direct 50% drop in sales in November, with ad clicks falling by over 40%, as the entire category is "choked" by these new requirements.
This year's shopper is more frugal and calculating than ever. According to a recent BCG report, 77% of consumers are deliberately delaying their purchases until Black Friday and Cyber Monday to buy in one concentrated burst.
They are not just waiting; they are optimizing with new tools:
The takeaway: Your customers aren't gone; they are just waiting. They are being told to "hold" for the deepest discount, and they will use AI to prove it.
The final, overlooked risk is the longest holiday return window in history. All items sold from now through the end of the year can be returned until January 31, 2026.
This creates a massive, long-tail financial risk for sellers.
In response, Amazon has quietly launched the new "Returns Dashboard." This tool is designed to help sellers survive the coming wave. Its key functions are:
This season, patience and strategy will win. Success won't be about just "turning on ads," but about navigating compliance, understanding the new AI-powered frugal shopper, and aggressively managing the returns that will inevitably follow.
Linktrans Logistics was founded in 2010, we are an Amazon SPN service provider. Focus on cross-border e-commerce comprehensive logistics services including airfreight/sea freight /Multiple Transportation cross-border freight door-to-door delivery, brokerage, warehousing and tailor made shipping consultant service for e-commerce sellers worldwide.
Based in the headquarters office in Dongguan, Guangdong, we have developed 17 local branch offices/warehouses including Hong Kong, Qingdao, Shanghai, Hangzhou, Ningbo, Suzhou, Fuzhou, Xiamen, Shenzhen, Guangzhou, Changsha, etc. and 6 overseas branch offices/warehouses in Los Angeles, New Jersey, Houston, Chicago Savannah in the USA and Ipswich in the UK.