02 February 2026
7 trends you can’t ignore from the 2026 eCommerce Report
Explore online shopping trends from the Australia Post eCommerce Report, plus practical takeaways you can use to drive growth now
Australia’s eCommerce sector is often judged by performance metrics - conversion rates, fulfilment speed and customer experience.
But this year’s Inside Retail Top 50 People in E‑commerce reveal something more important: the fastest‑growing businesses aren’t winning alone. They’re winning together.
Behind many of Australia’s leading online businesses is a highly collaborative network. Leaders who share insight. Partners who work closely together. And an industry that moves forward through shared capability, not competition alone.
It’s this spirit of collaboration that’s helping Australian eCommerce businesses scale faster, operate smarter and stay resilient in a constantly evolving market.
Unlike many industries, eCommerce rarely operates in isolation. Retailers, platforms, logistics providers and technology partners are deeply interconnected, a reality that has shaped a uniquely open culture.
Speaking with the cohort of 2026’s Inside Retail Top 50 People in E‑commerce, leaders repeatedly pointed to the strength of community as a defining feature of the sector. As #1 and Oz Hair & Beauty COO Guy Nappa explains, operators are often united by shared challenges rather than direct competition. “You’re not necessarily competing with everyone because everyone sells different things,” he says. “So people are a lot more open to share their thoughts, their concerns, their problems.”
That openness isn’t theoretical - it has direct commercial impact. “I’ve gotten so much out of it - advice, perspective, meeting new people - it’s allowed me to grow the business,” Nappa adds.
The same sentiment was echoed across retail brands. “In the last 12 months, the eCommerce community has become tighter than ever,” says Heather Earl, #14 and winner of ‘One to Watch Award’, Head of eCommerce at Nutrition Warehouse Group, pointing to increased idea sharing among peers. “It genuinely feels more like a community than it ever has.”
For many businesses, that mindset extends directly to customers. For top ten winner #2, Argylica Conditsis, of Babyboo, community isn’t a layer - it’s the brand itself. “Our community literally influences every single decision we make,” the founder says. “We constantly receive feedback and pivot based on what she wants.”
While products and brands may differ, the challenges are often the same - delivery performance, systems integration, rising customer expectations and managing peak demand. Rather than guarding insight, leaders described an industry where sharing what works helps lift the entire sector.
Ask eCommerce leaders what they check first each morning, and the answers reveal a lot about how modern businesses operate.
For some, it’s performance dashboards - sales, conversion and fulfilment metrics. For others, it’s emails or task lists, making sure teams are aligned before the day gains momentum.
What’s consistent isn’t the tool, but the intent: visibility. In an always‑on environment, early visibility isn’t a habit - it’s a leadership advantage.
Hear the daily habits from the leaders themselves.
Video: A series of different business owners are smiling to camera, at a ‘Top 50 People in E-Commerce’ event. Title: ‘Just getting started’. The co-founders of Babyboo, Angelica and Will, are being interviewed at the event.
Audio: Angelica: The one thing I would tell someone that’s just starting up and they’re working from their kitchen I would say to focus on marketing. Like, that is the only thing that really matters, is getting in front of your customer.
Video: Text: “Focus on Marketing”. Text: “Get in front of your customer”. An interview is now being held with Elysia Krstevski, the founder and CEO of Meke Baby.
Audio: Elysia: You’ve gotta take the risk, you’ve gotta go with the momentum, and you’ve gotta move quickly.
Video: Text: “Take the risk move fast”. An interview is now being held with Guy Nappa, the COO of Oz Hair & Beauty.
Audio: Guy: The barriers to getting into ecom is very low, just, you know, know your product and go all in.
Video: Text: “Know your product go all in”. An interview is now being held with Jackie Kruger, the CEO of Black Milk Clothing.
Audio: Jackie: I think it’s about really understanding what your USP is and how you’re leaning into that.
Video: Text: “Know your USP”. An interview is now being held with Olivia Carr, the founder of Shhh Silk.
Audio: Olivia: I really embrace Gen Z’s, I do not understand TikTok, but they absolutely get it. So my advice to other founders, other brands, would be absolutely hire talent that live in that world.
Video: Text: “Hire people that get it”. The interviews transition to a red background and text appears “Start small, think big, back yourself”. The Australia Post logo appears below.
Many of today’s established eCommerce brands started small. But the advice Top 50 leaders give to those starting out is grounded firmly in commercial reality.
The first priority is customer acquisition and visibility. Without demand, even the best product struggles to scale. Understanding where customers are, how they discover brands and what drives conversion remains fundamental.
Next is clarity of proposition. With lower barriers to entry, differentiation matters more than ever. Leaders consistently spoke about knowing your product, your customer and your reason for existing - and building everything from that foundation.
Finally, there’s a strong emphasis on speed and decisiveness. Waiting for perfect conditions often means missing opportunity. The most resilient businesses are those that test, learn and move quickly, while staying closely connected to customer feedback.
This isn't about shortcuts. It's about building momentum with intention – take it from some of Inside Retail’s Top 50 People in E-commerce.
Video: In a large room where a ‘Top 50 People in E-Commerce’ event is being held, there are multiple business owners standing around chatting. Title: ‘What do you check each morning?’ Guy Nappa, the COO of Oz Hair & Beauty is being interviewed.
Audio: Guy: I always check my to do list, always make sure I’m on top of emails.
Video: An illustrated purple mobile phone appears on a purple background up while Guy is speaking. Text: “To do list emails”. An illustrated envelope appears on the phone representing an email. Jackie Kruger, the CEO of Black Milk Clothing, is now being interviewed.
Audio: Jackie: So I’m on our Shopify dashboard every single morning looking at what our sales were yesterday, how they’re tracking today.
Video: An illustrated phone pops up while Jackie is speaking, which is animated to look like a market stall. Animated illustrations of small packages and shopping bags start to appear at the base of the phone. The background is green and show multiple Shopify logos. Text: “Shopify dashboard”. Paula Mitchell, the Digital GM of Freedom, is now being interviewed.
Audio: Paula: I check the sales figures for the day before to make sure we hit those targets and I’m checking my emails.
Video: A person’s hands are seen checking annual sales targets on an iPad while Paula is speaking. Text: “Sales Targets Emails”. Elysia Krstevski, the founder and CEO of Meke Baby, is now being interviewed. She laughs.
Audio: Elysia: Shopify? Every morning or 100 times a day.
Video: A green illustrated phone on a grey background appears while Elysia is speaking. An animated shopping trolley drives over the phone representing an online purchase, with the word ‘Buy’ beneath it. Shopify logos are visible on the background. Text: “Shopify (x100)”. Olivia Carr, the founder of Shhh Silk, is now being interviewed.
Audio: Olivia: The number one thing I check in the morning, it really does depend, because at the moment I’m tracking my hormones. So, I do, I have a hormone tracker.
Video: Text: “Also… hormone tracker”. The interviews transition to a red background and text appears “Different Mornings, same goal, keep things moving”. The Australia Post logo appears below.
For top performers, technology isn’t about acceleration at any cost. It’s about reducing friction, improving consistency and supporting better decision‑making at scale.
Rather than chasing trends, leaders focus on technology that reduces operational friction, improves customer experience and helps teams work more efficiently. Several spoke about how embedded these tools have become in day-to-day operations — to the point where AI is no longer seen as a novelty, but as part of the standard way work gets done. As #45 on the list, Meke Baby founder and CEO Elysia Krstevski put it, she “doesn’t remember life without AI,” describing it as something her business now relies on to work smarter and move faster, not to cut corners.
What stands out is that the strongest performers aren’t using technology as a shortcut to growth. They invest first in solid foundations - systems, data and process - before layering in more advanced capability. In this context, AI and automation are viewed as ways to scale consistency and quality across the business, supporting better decisions and execution rather than replacing commercial judgement.
As businesses grow, partnerships become increasingly critical. Reliable logistics, transparent communication and aligned incentives all play a key role in maintaining customer trust.
For many Inside Retail Top 50 People in E-commerce leaders - including this year's #1, Guy Nappa - success is described as a shared outcome. One built alongside teams, suppliers and partners who understand the pressures of peak demand, rapid growth and evolving customer expectations.
Strong partnerships allow businesses to focus on what they do best, while relying on others to help deliver seamless, end-to-end experiences – hear more from this years winner Guy Nappa.
Video: In a large room where a ‘Top 50 People in E-Commerce’ event is being held, there are multiple business owners standing around chatting. Title: ‘Inside Retail’s Top 50 People in E-Commerce, presented by Australia Post’. Guy Nappa, the COO of Oz Hair & Beauty’, is walking towards the stage where he shakes the hand of the presenter and accepts his award. He and the presenter pose for a photo. Guy is then being interviewed.
Audio: Guy: It’s just a very surreal feeling, like I haven’t even digested it yet to be honest, it’s a reflection on not only me and my two brothers, but like, specifically the team, because we all work so bloody hard. We have a laser focus of what we’re doing, and little things like tonight are the recognition for the whole company.
Video: A sign comes into view which reads “Top 50 People in E-Commerce, presented by Australia Post”, along with a decorative flower arrangement. There is a brightly lit wall filled with partner logos, and people enjoying the event.
Audio: Guy: Australia Post has been a key strategic partner for us, we work very closely with our Account Manager, just to make sure we’re not just competing on price, cause price is only one part of the experience for the customer.
Video: Business owners continue to mingle and chat. A speaker on stage gives a presentation. The interview with Guy continues.
Audio: Guy: We know to make sure the speed, the communication and the overall journey for the customer is seamless, cause in a world where Amazon and all these other competitors are coming in, Australia Post allows us to be the market leader in shipping and fulfilment.
Video: A red background appears with the Australia Post logo in the middle.
What stands out most from this year’s Inside Retail Top 50 People in E-commerce is how Australia’s eCommerce industry has evolved.
The focus has shifted from growth at all costs to building sustainable, well‑run businesses that deliver long‑term value for customers, teams and partners.
In a maturing market, the leaders shaping the future aren’t doing it alone - they’re building it together.
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Author
Katie Dower is a content manager who creates practical, research‑informed content for Australian small and medium businesses, with a strong focus on eCommerce. Drawing on experience across enterprise communications and logistics‑related industries, she works with business research and industry insights to translate delivery and operational complexity into clear, useful guidance - supporting Australian businesses as they grow and evolve.
02 February 2026
Explore online shopping trends from the Australia Post eCommerce Report, plus practical takeaways you can use to drive growth now