After a down year in 2020, back-to-school shopping has reached an inflection point, and there may be no turning back. A combination of rising e-commerce volumes, supply chain backups, shifting demand trends and COVID-driven uncertainty has made this year's back-to-school season unlike any other. But retailers big and small will need to gear up for a future that may look a lot like this new normal.
Hitting The Books? Try Downloading Them
"For the most part, we have a generation of kids who were not in school last year overwhelmingly within the U.S.," Stacy DeBroff, CEO and founder of influencer marketing company Influence Central, told Modern Shipper, "and yet, because of the at-home learning, parents last year spent a lot on upgrading electronics."
For the most part, we have a generation of kids who were not in school last year.
Stacy Debroff, CEO and founder, Influence Central
"We talked to at least 350 houses, and 80% of parents and houses [plan to spend] the majority on attire — clothes, shoes, coats, you know, what kids are wearing to school," said DeBroff. "Because for the most part, when you think about virtual learning, parents weren't really shopping for outfits."
As a result, items like backpacks, lunch boxes, and clothing are flying off the shelves this year as kids get ready to revive their on-campus experience. But while that's great business for L.L. Bean and Old Navy (NYSE:GPS), it also means that retailers and consumers could be facing significant shortages of those products.
"Because of the anxiety of going back to school for kids who have been out of the classroom for so long, you're going to find that parents are willing to invest more upfront on making kids feel confident and cool and excited about their backpack," said DeBroff. "It's going to be a less functional purchase and more emotional."
Online Shopping Is Off The Charts
"I think that what you've seen is that parents are really, really agile in ordering online. And the retailers have scrambled because retail, traditionally, has been a space that was not as e-commerce and tech-forward as others," DeBroff explained. "Seventy percent of consumers say they're going to split back-to-school shopping between both online and in-store. They've clearly become 100% comfortable ordering online."
Related:
Read: A closer look at Maersk's budding e-commerce operations
Read: Fillogic and the metamorphosis of physical retail
According to DeBroff, parents were already heavily using e-commerce channels to shop for electronics in 2020. But whereas parents once preferred to shop for attire in person so that their children could pick out apparel and try it on, it seems they no longer feel the need to do so. Additionally, she notes that a heavily digital 2020 has inspired the use of more social media and influencer marketing tactics, which has only served to boost e-commerce sales further.
"I think that the engagement and connection of shopper marketing, with retail and with influencers, has been the biggest trend that we've seen," DeBroff said.
Trouble In The Suez
Of course, one of the biggest influencers on back-to-school shopping conditions this year and in the future is the supply chain. And it's not doing too well right now.
As U.S. companies have increasingly outsourced manufacturing offshore to China and other Asian countries, it's become near-impossible for retailers and logistics providers to guarantee on-time deliveries. While retailers are scrambling to make ends meet by boosting U.S. production, the vast majority of their products still have to go through a supply chain that's very much in flux.
Delta Variance
COVID is the gift that keeps on giving. Just when it seemed like the U.S. was turning a corner in its pandemic relief, the country was hit by the devastating delta variant, which is projected to play a big role in back-to-school shopping trends.
According to both DeBroff and Stanton, delta's impact will likely vary geographically — states and counties hit hardest by the new variant, or facing the strictest mask and vaccine mandates, figure to see fewer parents doing their back-to-school shopping early, or at all.
Per DeBroff, just 59% of parents anticipate buying a new backpack or lunchbox for their kids, despite their having been out of school for over a year. Intuitively, one would expect that figure to be closer to 100%. But the uncertainty around in-person learning brought about by the delta variant has led to greater hesitancy to spend big on those products.
"I don't think that parents are going to go splurge on a whole new set of clothing for their kids if they're just going to be on virtual learning from Zoom," DeBroff said.
Back-To-School Isn't Going Back To Normal
COVID-19 may have accelerated the back-to-school shopping trends we're seeing in 2021, but Stanton doesn't foresee them losing steam anytime soon. He emphasized that these trends were underway before the pandemic hit and that the two aren't as inextricably linked as they may seem.
"People are getting more used to buying online, whether that's food or technology or whatever other products. … Companies like Carvana and others sell exclusively online," Stanton said. "I don't think that trend is going to reduce. I do think it's going to continue. I don't see it slowing down, and some would even argue that it's even going to accelerate further over the next 24 months."
"I actually do not believe that they have to concede," he said. "Personally, I think there's room for smaller companies as well as the major companies like the Amazons of the world. … They have to differentiate like every company, and they have to invest where it's appropriate. I think there's definitely room for success for everybody, but it then becomes about execution."
I think there's room for smaller companies as well as the major companies like the Amazons of the world.
Mark Stanton, GM supply chain solutions, Powerfleet
"If you provide really high-quality customer service, which is really based upon information … you can start looking at that as a way of differentiating yourself from your competitors. I think there's an area there where technology, like telemetry and other things, can play a part in that business model and that differentiation."
In other words, if small or medium-size back-to-school retailers focus on speed, transparency, and personalization, they can position themselves as more reliable than a larger firm like Amazon that handles millions of parcels every day. Stanton emphasizes that data and technology are the best way to make informed decisions around those aspects.
Of course, it could all be a fluke; the pandemic could end, and back-to-school shopping habits could return to the normalcy of 2019. But what's more likely is that the definition of normalcy is shifting — and retailers will need to shift with it.
You may also like:
CalAmp temperature sensor boosts pharma and bio supply chain visibility
The best companion apps for rideshare drivers, according to rideshare drivers
Zero emissions, zero traffic: How an EV company is making delivery sustainable
© 2026 Benzinga.com. Benzinga does not provide investment advice. All rights reserved.
To add Benzinga News as your preferred source on Google, click here.
