Record trade volumes overshadowed by tariff headlines
Global trade reached more than $2.2 trillion last year, growing roughly 7% over 12 months, but media attention fixated on a different story. In January a new U.S. presidential administration began imposing tariffs on trading partners, and that activity extended through much of 2025.
Tariff rates climbed steeply in many cases, reaching double- and even triple-digit levels for particular country-product combinations. Large producers such as China drew much of the attention, but smaller nations were also targeted and affected.
From predictable duties to a volatile trade environment
The sudden and sweeping tariff moves left companies facing a far more complex and less predictable trade landscape. Rapid changes to duty schedules, shifting compliance obligations and new landed-cost structures reshaped sourcing and distribution choices across industries.
Why companies accelerated GTM adoption
As volatility continued into 2026, U.S. manufacturers, distributors and other firms sought help from global trade management (GTM) platforms. These systems centralize trade data, automate compliance workflows and give visibility into classifications, tariff rates and regulatory rules.
Oscar Sanchez Duran, senior principal research analyst with Gartner Supply Chain Research, says a mix of economic, geopolitical, technological, social and regulatory disruptions drove organizations to speed up their GTM rollouts. He notes that the events beginning in early 2025 renewed corporate focus on trade compliance and the need for technology-driven solutions.
How GTM systems operate and the problems they solve
GTM software consolidates trade information in one place and applies consistent logic to transactions as they flow through the supply chain. Typical capabilities include:
- Mapping products to tariff and HS codes
- Applying country-specific duty and tax rates
- Running compliance checks against current trade rules and sanctions
- Providing visibility into landed cost impacts across sourcing and routing options
By aligning classification, duty calculations and rule checks, GTM helps firms detect cost and regulatory impacts earlier and make proactive adjustments to sourcing, routing or pricing.
Cost optimization, special procedures and scenario planning
Beyond compliance, GTM platforms help companies model scenarios and optimize trade flows. They support special customs regimes such as foreign trade zones (FTZs) and can identify cost-saving opportunities tied to tariff mitigation and duty drawback strategies.
Gartner research highlights that GTM vendors are increasingly embedding analysis and near-real-time insights using trade content and data to help organizations optimize flows and reduce expenses while rethinking supply chain design.
Vendors, AI and a shifting product landscape
Software vendors have responded by adding automation, optimization and artificial intelligence capabilities to their GTM offerings. Startups and point-solution providers in particular are applying AI to tasks such as product classification and tariff calculation, bringing new automation and also more fragmentation to a market that had been relatively mature.
According to Gartner, these developments are producing a wave of AI-assisted solutions that range from narrow classification tools to broader platforms focused on end-to-end trade optimization.
Market demand and buyer intentions
GTM moved into the upper ranks of supply chain software investment in 2025. The 2025 Gartner Business Buyer Survey found that 23% of supply chain software buyers considered GTM their most important product investment for the year.
Of those surveyed, 74% planned to buy GTM in 2025—40% as a net-new purchase and 34% as a replacement for existing systems—underscoring strong buyer momentum driven by recent global events.
Practitioner perspectives on process and readiness
Brandon Hamilton, a systems project manager at St. Onge Co., says shifting tariffs and sanctions made shippers reexamine compliance processes and automation. He notes that inconsistent government policy and frequent changes are prompting companies to move from reactive patches to more deliberate trade process reviews.
Hamilton emphasizes that readiness matters as much as functionality. Organizations need a clear understanding of their operational landscape—product classification practices, data ownership and decision responsibilities—before layering GTM tools on top of existing processes. Without that clarity, firms risk automating inconsistent or fragmented practices.
GTM’s operational and financial reach
While GTM solutions are often associated with compliance and regulatory tasks, they also provide operational and financial capabilities. The platforms commonly integrate with B2B networks, trade content services and channels for filing customs documentation.
Gartner points out that GTM applications that focus on international operations are useful for transportation sourcing, planning and execution management, enabling shippers to manage shipments with cross-border considerations such as Incoterms, multiple stakeholders, multi-leg transportation and different currencies.
What to expect in 2026 and beyond
Industry observers expect GTM investment and adoption to continue accelerating through 2026. Sanchez Duran argues that the extreme tariff volatility and ongoing regulatory change have created favorable conditions for GTM vendors, and that these systems moved from niche compliance tools to broadly used operational systems during 2025.
He and other analysts expect the trend to persist as organizations modernize aging systems, retire end-of-life software and seek greater transparency, resilience and security in their trade operations—trends likely to keep GTM near the top of supply chain software priorities.
No comments yet. Be the first to comment!