Business

Retail Fixture Industry on the Brink: Fear, Debt, and Survival

“If a retailer stalls in growth, it will perish.”

Photo by Aero Drone

The manufacturing of custom store fixtures, retail interiors, and salon and spa environments has slowed to a crawl. Tariffs may have triggered the downturn, but what threatens our survival today is something deeper; an attitude of fear and hesitation among clients and purchasing authorities.

Uncertainty has paralyzed decision-makers. Many wrestle with the responsibility of whether to invest in new stores and redesigned retail environments or wait indefinitely. An old adage rings true: If a retailer stalls in growth, it will perish. Yet, across North America, store planning departments with plans to expand are being overruled by corporate controllers who refuse to approve spending until long-term sales growth is undeniable.

The slowdown creates another pressing challenge; clients delaying or withholding payment. Projects completed in 2024 remain unpaid, leaving suppliers exposed. Two American clients even admitted their legal teams advised them to “Forget the Canadians,” and skip payment. Thankfully, most of my clients operate with integrity and eventually settle their debts, but the risk is real.

Every day I quote American projects worth significant sums. Yet without prepayment, too many slip through my hands. If a client refuses to pay $150,000 upfront, why should I believe they will cover the full cost later? This creates a dangerous cycle; companies like mine invest time, design, and engineering only to be used, strung along, and discarded. The financial strain is bad enough. The emotional toll is worse. At times, I’ve searched for a therapist to manage the stress, only to find Canada’s mental health system overwhelmed and waitlists impossibly long.

I’m exhausted from chasing new clients who are themselves scrambling for sales. Going into the office feels like a burden. My phone rings off the hook; telemarketers and AI robots trying to do what I do: hunt for the next big project. In one week, I counted 61 calls, almost all noise. The competition is relentless, and the distraction adds to the sense of futility.

This isn’t simply about finding new work. It’s about survival. When clients hesitate, when suppliers aren’t paid, when tariffs and politics squeeze margins, our entire industry teeters.

The truth is this industry’s struggle didn’t start yesterday. Years ago, domestic importers flooded the market with price-sensitive fixtures from Asia and India. That move weakened local manufacturing and trained clients to expect cheap things. Now, tariffs and economic policy add to the pressure, while our own governments make choices that erode trust.

So, where do we turn? How do we rebuild confidence when the average citizen fights to keep their household afloat?

The answer lies in resilience. As manufacturers and suppliers, we must sharpen our screening of potential clients, demand fair payment terms, and protect our intellectual and creative investments. We must also advocate for stronger trade protections and government support that values domestic industries instead of undermining them.

The slowdown is painful, but paralysis will only accelerate decline. Growth requires courage, from retailers willing to invest and from suppliers who refuse to accept exploitation as business as usual.

The fixture industry has weathered storms before. Survival depends on adapting, holding the line on value, and pushing forward even when fear says “wait.”

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