The short answer is yes, and the operators who begin planning now will be the ones who stay in control of their margins. This isn't alarmism. It's a clear look at the cost-structure reality taking shape while much of the industry is still operating with a 2021–2022 mindset.
Yes, the Middle East conflict is pushing gas prices up. Yes, fuel surcharges are beginning to reappear. And yes, even if fuel prices ease later this year, the underlying structural issues remain. The real drivers are systemic: data center expansion is consuming enormous amounts of electricity, grid constraints are tightening across multiple regions, electrification is increasing baseline demand, and natural gas volatility is becoming the norm rather than the exception.
The more important point is this: when energy is structurally higher, every cost center eventually reflects it. This is why waiting is risky. Higher energy costs cascade into packaging, ingredients, co-man fees, transportation, cold chain, retailer logistics, warehousing, labor, and health care and benefits, which continue to rise and directly impact employer costs. It's not one line item. It's the entire cost structure, quietly moving in one direction.
Everyone is fatigued: operators, retailers, consumers. But fatigue doesn't change math. What's happening now is a pattern worth recognizing:
Brands are holding price while costs creep up again
Retailers are raising private label prices quietly
Freight volatility is returning
Energy-linked inputs are rising faster than most P&Ls reflect
Health care and benefits inflation is accelerating
This is how brands get caught flat-footed heading into the next cycle. The warning signs are familiar. The difference this time is that many operators aren't watching for them.
This is the nuance most operators miss. The argument here isn't for immediate price action. It's for discipline. If you wait until you need a price increase, you've already lost leverage.
Strategizing now means doing the hard internal work before the urgency hits:
Modeling 12–18 months of energy-driven COGS
Accounting for rising labor and health care costs
Identifying which SKUs can carry price
Building the retailer narrative early
Sequencing innovation to support price
Preparing pack architecture options
Timing the increase to category dynamics
The brands having these conversations now will control the narrative when the time comes. The ones who wait will be reacting, and that's a much harder position to be in.
Retailers aren't anti-price. They're anti-surprise. That distinction matters enormously when you're sitting across the table from a buyer. If you show up with a clear cost story, a category rationale, a velocity protection plan, a promo strategy, and a packaging or innovation tie-in, you can get it through. If you show up late and without a plan, you won't. Preparation isn't just good practice — it's the entry ticket.
This is the part many operators overlook. Price increases land best when they're paired with product news, and that doesn't always mean a brand-new SKU. It means showing up with a reason for the price, not just a justification.
Renovation protects velocity and gives retailers a reason to support a higher price. This includes new pack sizes and formats, improved formulas, cleaner labels, and a better overall sensory experience. These aren't cosmetic changes. They signal investment in the brand and give buyers something to point to.
Innovation creates the "why now" moment that makes pricing more acceptable. New products, new platforms, new usage occasions, and new functional benefits shift the conversation from cost defense to brand momentum. In a 2027–2029 environment where energy, labor, and health care costs remain structurally elevated, innovation isn't optional. It's the economic engine that makes pricing possible.
Most of the industry is still talking about value, trade-down, and holding price. That's understandable given where consumer sentiment has been. But the brands that come out of this cycle ahead will be the ones already thinking about structural cost reality, operator discipline, retailer psychology, and innovation-led pricing strategy, while their competitors are still playing defense.
For many CPG operators, this environment feels uncertain, but it's not unfamiliar. During the hyper-inflationary period just a few years ago, Chief Outsiders helped more than 450 consumer brands and 300 private equity portfolio companies navigate rapid cost escalation, rebuild pricing architecture, and secure retailer alignment without sacrificing velocity. Our fractional CMOs and CSOs have lived through these cycles inside the industry, and we bring that same operator-level discipline to today's environment. Whether it's modeling cost scenarios, crafting a defensible pricing narrative, or pairing renovation and innovation with a price strategy retailers will support, we help founder-led and PE-backed brands move with clarity, confidence, and control.