Obaid Arshad

Navigating the Challenges of Cross-Border E-commerce

Published on September, 2025

In this age, the world is connected, communication is made very easy because of which has made buying and selling around the globe very popular among many. Specifically in the e-commerce industry, every new brand is struggling to have a global presence to make more profits. In 2025, the global e-commerce market is predicted to reach $4.8 trillion, which will grow in the coming years. 

Why is cross-border e-commerce important for brands?

It is important for the following reasons:

 

Revenue Growth

When a brand goes global, it gets access to new groups of customers. Now your target audience is greater in number. You can reach millions of people who may be interested in buying from you. The probability of selling products increases. 

For example, 

If you are selling your products just in Pakistan, your target customers are limited, but if you are doing cross-border e-commerce business as well, it will add a million more to the number of your potential customers. Brands such as Nishat, Sapphire are operating cross-border in the UAE and, UK through online retail, generating good revenue. 

 

Brands Don’t Rely on One Market

Relying only on your local market can be risky. What if economic conditions change? What if competition increases or buying habits shift?
Going global spreads your business across different countries. So, if one market is slow or unstable, other markets can keep you going. It’s like not putting all your eggs in one basket; you reduce risk and gain stability.

 

Build a Strong International Image

Brands that are working on an international platform are more trusted and recognized by people. It adds to the value of the brand because it makes people think that your product is liked by customers from different cultural backgrounds, customers around the world consider your products, so there must be something special about your brand. People confidently make an online purchase from brands like Nike, Samsung because they know that these big names are operating internationally and are trusted by many people around the globe.  

 

Scalable Operations

Thanks to e-commerce technology, businesses don’t need to open physical stores in every country. A single online infrastructure, like a website, app, or digital catalog, can serve multiple regions.
You can manage orders, inventory, and customer support for different countries from one system. This makes it easier and more cost-effective to grow globally. With the right tools, you can start small and scale quickly.

 

Key Challenges to Overcome

 

Cultural and language differences

Selling to customers in other countries means you have to understand their culture and language. People prefer to shop in their language and expect local styles, like how sizes are measured (inches vs. centimeters), preferred colors, or even how dates are written. Holidays, fashion choices, and popular products can vary a lot. If you don’t adapt your content and offerings to match local tastes, customers might not feel comfortable buying from you.

 

Shipping and logistics

One of the biggest hurdles in cross-border selling is delivery because:

  • International shipping is expensive and often slow. 
  • Shipping prices may change depending on country, weight, and delivery speed. 
  • Brands have to deal with customs clearance, which can delay orders if the paperwork isn’t perfect. 
  • If a customer wants to return something, it’s even harder and more costly to process international returns, making reverse logistics a real challenge.

 

Currency and payments

People want to pay in their currency, using payment methods they trust. If your store only accepts dollars or cards, many customers might drop off. Some may prefer cash-on-delivery (COD) or local mobile wallets. You’ll also need to show accurate currency conversions so prices are clear. If there are hidden charges or confusing pricing, customers won’t complete the purchase.

 

Legal work, taxes, and compliance

Every country has different rules for:

  • Selling products
  • Shipping 
  • Taxes or duties on products 

For example, some countries charge import taxes or require certain documents for customs. You must also follow privacy laws like GDPR (Europe) or CCPA (California) to protect customer data. Even things like labeling products, giving refunds, or handling complaints are governed by local laws, and not following them can get you into legal trouble.

 

Trust and reputation

If your brand is not well-known in another country, people may hesitate to order. They worry about scams, poor quality, or no returns. To build trust, you need:

  • Clear return policies, 
  • visible order tracking, 
  • Genuine customer reviews
  • Secure payment options 

Moreover, showing that your website is safe also helps reduce doubt and increase confidence in your store.

 

Customer support and communication

Customers in different countries live in different time zones, speak different languages, and have different expectations. That means you need to offer fast support in a way that’s convenient for them.

Artificial Intelligence or Machine Learning is one of the most useful modern techniques to manage data preferences as it is used to collect, analyze and format the required set of information to recognize customer’s buying behaviors.

Customized content and Artificial Intelligence are well associated. The most crucial thing in social commerce is to keep users engage with related advertisements in their feeds. A research revealed that around 80% customers are inclined to buy from a brand that gives customized experiences, while this ratio turns to 90% if they find it pleasing.

Cross-border e-commerce is challenging for brands, but they can overcome these challenges through smart planning.

 

Localized content and shopping experience

To win international customers, you must speak their language, literally and culturally.

  • Translate your website, product pages, and customer support into the local language of your target market.
  • Use local sizing charts (like EU or UK sizes), currency formats (USD, AED, GBP), and measurement units (cm/inch).
  • Show local trust symbols to boost confidence.

 

Offer local payment methods

Different countries have different types of payment gateways. Many people don’t use international credit cards or prefer familiar, local options. 

  • Offer popular local payment methods such as Easypaisa, JazzCash (for Pakistani expats in UAE, PayPal, etc.
  • Accept multiple currencies so customers can shop in their local currency.
  • Use tools that automatically update exchange rates to show accurate prices.

This makes checkout easier and reduces drop-offs due to payment issues

 

Use smart pricing and display of duties

Hidden costs are annoying. This may cause your international customers to abandon their carts. Because when they see shipping charges or unexpected taxes that are not mentioned. So, you must use Delivered-Duty-Paid (DDP) pricing, which includes all costs upfront (product + tax + shipping).

Clearly show:

  • Shipping fees
  • Taxes
  • Estimated delivery times

Let customers know exactly what they’ll pay, no surprises at checkout. This improves transparency and increases the chance of completed purchases.

 

Optimize your shipping and logistics

Long-distance deliveries are a real challenge where a brand has to deal with high shipping costs and delays due to customs. These things can highly affect the customers’ experience. To resolve such problems, merchants should find ways to make shipping faster and cheaper to boost customer satisfaction and loyalty.

  • Partner with reliable international couriers (like DHL, Aramex, or UPS).
  • Use AI-powered order routing to ship from the closest warehouse.
  • As your business grows, consider setting up local fulfillment centers in key markets. For example, Store inventory in the UAE or Saudi Arabia for the GCC region, or in Germany for Europe.

 

Provide responsive customer support

Time zones of your international customers might be different, and language differences are also there. But like all other customers, they expect quick responses to their queries and helpful customer support. Quick support builds trust and reduces complaints.  

In this advanced technology and AI period, where communication is made much easier, you can offer them 24/7 customer support through:

  • WhatsApp
  • Live chat
  • Email
  • Social media messaging
  • Use chatbots to answer common questions instantly
  • Send order updates or confirmations via IVR (voice calls) or SMS.

 

Manage returns smoothly

Returns are part of e-commerce, but handling them internationally is more complex. Adopt these strategies to reduce costs and boost customer confidence in purchasing from your brand:

  • Set up a clear return policy visible before checkout.
  • Allow easy returns through local drop-off points or return partners, instead of sending products back across borders.
  • Monitor return reasons to improve your product quality or size guides.

 

Stay compliant and protect your brand

Every country has its laws regarding packaging, taxes, product labeling, and customer data.

Ensure your products follow local regulations:

  • Labeling in the right language
  • Correct sizing, ingredients, or usage info

Be transparent about data privacy and follow laws like:

  • GDPR (Europe)
  • CCPA (California)
  • Local consumer rights acts

When you follow the rules, you avoid fines, and customers see you as a serious and trusted brand.

Step-by-Step Guide for Brands

Step 1: Choose Target Markets

Identify regions where demand for your product already exists or aligns with your capabilities (e.g., UAE, UK, Canada for South Asian fashion).

 

Step 2: Localization Audit

Translate site/app, marketing emails, sizing charts, and FAQs. Include local imagery or branding elements.

 

Step 3: Payment and Pricing Setup

Enable multi-currency and local wallets. Offer dynamic pricing and clear shipping/duty info.

 

Step 4: Fulfillment Strategy

Build shared logistics pipelines—warehouse partners, local couriers, and smart routing algorithms.

 

Step 5: Marketing and Trust Building

Work with local influencers, run region-specific ads, use social shopping tools, and show customer reviews.

 

Step 6: Support and Feedback Channels

Set up WhatsApp or local-language chatbots, offer support during local business hours, and monitor feedback data.

 

Step 7: Continuous Optimization

Use analytics to track conversions, returns, shipping times, and customer satisfaction. Optimize flows, update localization, and adjust logistics.

Final thoughts

No doubt that cross-border e-commerce gets you a lot of profit and recognition among not just millions but trillions of people. For brands in Pakistan, it is a great opportunity only if they adopt the right strategies and do their homework regarding new markets before expanding.  The tools are available, AI‑powered platforms like Ginkgo Retail’s Comverse are already helping brands automate multi-currency pricing, smart routing, WhatsApp-based communication, and cross-border logistics. With thoughtful strategy, localized execution, and the right platform, you can navigate the complexities of cross-border trade successfully and reach customers around the world.

Obaid Arshad

CEO & Co-Founder

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