Shippers face new pressures as Amazon sets the parcel baseline. Learn how to rethink parcel strategy, network design and decisions to protect cost and service.
Amazon now handles more U.S. parcels than USPS. In 2025, Amazon carried about 6.7 billion parcels while USPS handled about 6.6 billion. UPS and FedEx moved fewer parcels by volume while remaining leaders in parcel revenue and complex services. Regional and alternative parcel carriers grew volumes at double digit rates.
This is not just a change in rankings. It changes what customers expect and how your parcel decisions affect cost and service.
Your parcel strategy now must reconcile rising expectations with a more dynamic carrier landscape.
Customers increasingly expect:
They bring those expectations to every brand, not just Amazon. A three to five business day promise feels slow and uncertain in many categories, especially with limited visibility.
At the same time, carriers are tuning their networks.
These moves help carriers manage their own performance and investment. For shippers, they introduce new variables into planning. These shifts show up every month in the parcel market.
Amazon’s rise reflects a different approach to parcel, not only larger scale. Two elements matter to every shipper.
Amazon and other large retailers have moved inventory closer to demand, using more fulfillment locations so parcels travel fewer zones. Shorter distances support faster delivery, reduce exposure to some surcharges and give more flexibility when conditions change.
Many shippers still rely on fewer nodes serving broad territories. That can be efficient for certain products, but it increases the share of parcels that must travel long distances. When market conditions or carrier rules change, these networks are harder to adjust.
Advanced shippers use detailed parcel network, tracking and order data to decide:
They view parcel cost and service in terms of weight, distance, product mix and customer segment, not only carrier and contract.
By contrast, many organizations mainly track total parcel spend and carrier scorecards. That is useful, but not enough for questions like:
Treating parcel as a network and decision issue opens more options than treating it only as a carrier issue.
In our view, high performing parcel shipping teams tend to do three things.
1. Get a clear view of parcel performance
They move from aggregate views to specific patterns. Using parcel analytics, they look at:
By combining shipment, cost and performance data into one view, teams can quickly see:
This clarity is the starting point. Without it, network changes and contract optimization work are guesswork.
2. Change the parcel network where it moves numbers
With that view, they look for a small set of changes that shift measurable outcomes.
Examples:
Each move is judged on:
The goal is not complexity. The goal is targeted moves with clear impact.
3. Make parcel part of regular management
Leading teams also treat parcel as part of a standing operating rhythm. On a set cadence, they:
Parcel strategy becomes an ongoing practice, not a once a year event tied only to renewals.
Amazon’s position at the top of U.S. parcel volume, along with the continued growth of regional and alternative carriers, confirm that the parcel market is in a structural shift. Not to mention, Amazon Shipping’s entry into the parcel market and the early success being realized. Carrier networks, pricing and rules will continue to evolve. Customer expectations will not move backward.
You do not need a full rebuild to respond, but you do need a different posture. That posture includes:
In the new parcel era, the question is not whether you match every feature of the largest networks. The question is whether your parcel strategy keeps moving toward the expectations your customers already have while protecting the cost and margin your business needs.
Robyn is the Senior Vice President of Parcel Strategy & Solutions at Transportation Insight, leading small parcel strategy and solution development across various platforms and transportation modes. With nearly 26 years of experience, she specializes in e-commerce and international trade compliance. Robyn enhances digital supply chain platforms by addressing common shipper challenges and driving innovation.
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