# The Textile Playbook
*How marketing agencies buy branded apparel without losing their minds*

---

## Table of Contents

| Lesson | Title | What You'll Learn |
|--------|-------|-------------------|
| 1 | The Technique You Pick Determines Your Quality Ceiling | Pick embroidery, screen print, or DTF for the right job |
| 2 | Why Your "Simple Logo" Quote Varies 300% | Understand pricing games and hidden costs |
| 3 | The Design That Looks Better and Costs Less | Optimize designs for technique and budget |
| 4 | The Three Questions That Expose Bad Suppliers | Vet suppliers before they become your problem |
| 5 | When Cheap Becomes Expensive | Avoid the five cheap traps |
| 6 | Timeline Management Without Panic | Handle rush jobs and seasonal delays |
| 7 | The Prototype Investment | When €30 saves €2,000 |
| 8 | When Things Go Wrong | Fix problems without breaking relationships |
| 9 | Pricing Benchmarks That Actually Exist | Real numbers for negotiation |

---

*First Edition • May 2026*
*For marketing agencies buying branded apparel in the EU*

---

# Lesson 1: The Technique You Pick Determines Your Quality Ceiling

**Quick Summary:**  
Embroidery, DTG, screen print, transfer — each technique locks you into specific durability, cost, and visual outcomes. Pick the wrong one and you're explaining to your client why their premium jackets look like expo freebies.

**Why This Saves You:**  
A technique mismatch costs €2,000 and a client relationship. The "cheap" DTF print on workwear that peels after 5 washes. The "premium" embroidery that takes 2 weeks when the event is in 3 days. Get this right and everything else flows.

---

## The Decision Framework: What's the Goal?

| Goal | Right Technique | Why |
|------|----------------|-----|
| **Premium gifts, long-term workwear, brand prestige** | Embroidery | Adds texture, survives washing, signals quality. Works on fleece, caps, thick materials. Limited colors (unless using Coloreel, which multiplies cost). Takes days for large orders. |
| **Mass distribution, expos, giveaways, cotton bags** | Screen printing or DTF | Cheap per unit, fast turnaround, fine for items worn 1-2 times. Colorful possible. Less durable, less "premium" feel. |
| **Complex artwork, gradients, photorealistic designs** | Digital transfer / DTG | Handles fine detail and color range that embroidery can't. Fast. Durability trade-off acceptable for short-life items. |
| **Huge quantities, simple designs, tight deadlines** | Screen printing | Cheapest at volume. Limited colors per screen. Fast once set up. |

---

## Textile-Technique Mismatches (The "Oops" Moments)

| Textile | Technique | What Goes Wrong |
|---------|-----------|-----------------|
| **Light/sheer T-shirts** | Embroidery with small text | Destroys fabric, puckering, holes |
| **Fluffy fleece/Sherpa jackets** | DTF/Screen print | Ink sits on surface, doesn't adhere, looks cheap |
| **Two-sided items** (bags, reversible) | Embroidery | Backside is ugly, limits use |
| **Underwear/base layers** | Embroidery | Backside scratches skin, uncomfortable |
| **Waterproof jackets** | Embroidery (standard) | Creates holes, needs waterproof backing patch |
| **Terry cloth towels** | DTF | Ink spreads in fibers, blurry, low quality |

---

## The Rule

**Technique + Textile + Use case = Feasibility**

**Fixes:**
- Light T-shirts: Use DTF or small outline embroidery (no fill)
- Sherpa/fleece: Must embroider — print won't stick
- Two-sided: Large appliqué (covered back) or print only
- Base layers: Print or laser-etched, never embroidery
- Waterproof: Embroidery + heat-sealed waterproof backing (ask for it)
- Towels: Embroidery only — industry standard, print looks bad

---

## Real Example: The Cap Rush

**Client wants:** 5,000 caps for a trade show in 10 days. You choose embroidery because "it's nicer."

**Day 8:** Supplier needs 3 more weeks — large embroidery machines running 24/7 can only do ~500 caps/day, and they're booked solid.

**Result:** Air-freighting printed caps at 3× cost, or showing up with nothing.

**The rule:** Technique × Timeline × Budget = Feasibility. Change one, others shift.

---

*Part of The Textile Playbook*  
*Next: Lesson 2 — Why Your "Simple Logo" Quote Varies 300%*

---

# Lesson 2: Why Your "Simple Logo" Quote Varies 300%

**Quick Summary:**  
Same design, three suppliers, €800 to €2,400. They're not scamming you — they're pricing different things. **And some make money on the product, not the decoration.**

**Why This Saves You:**  
Spot who's padding the decoration and who's giving you a product margin play. Know where you can negotiate and where you can't.

---

## The Quote Is Never Just "Per Piece"

Every embroidery quote breaks down into:
- **Setup/digitizing:** €30-150 (one-time, converts your logo to machine-readable stitches)
- **Sample/mockup:** €20-50 (optional, recommended for first orders)
- **Per-piece price:** Depends on stitch count, colors, locations
- **Color changes:** €10-25 per change (each color = machine stop, thread change)
- **Rush fees:** 20-100% if under 2 weeks
- **Shipping:** Often excluded, can be €50-300
- **Digitizing revisions:** €20-50 if you change the logo after approval

**Screen print adds:**
- **Screen fees:** €25-50 per color (physical screens needed)
- **Minimum order:** Often 50-100 pieces to justify setup
- **Color limit:** Usually max 6-8 colors

**DTF/transfer adds:**
- **Film/setup:** €20-80 per design
- **No minimums:** But per-piece price higher
- **Color:** Unlimited, gradients fine

---

## The Hidden Pricing Game

| Strategy | What it means | Where the margin is |
|----------|---------------|---------------------|
| **Bundled pricing** | Product + decoration in one price | Usually 60-80% on product, 20-40% on decoration |
| **Customer-supplied goods** (Fremdware) | You supply items, they decorate | Decoration must cover all costs + profit |
| **Hybrid** | Discounted decoration if you buy product from them | Product margin subsidizes the work |

---

## Real Economics

**Cheap caps with 2-3 logos:**
- Cap wholesale: €1.50
- Your target margin: 30%
- Decoration cost: €2.50
- **Total margin left: almost nothing**
- Supplier can't budge on price — they're already at cost.

**Premium jackets with 1 logo:**
- Jacket wholesale: €25
- Your target margin: 35%
- Decoration cost: €4
- **Total margin available: €8-10**
- Supplier can discount decoration 50% and still make money on the jacket.

---

## The Negotiating Rule

**On cheap products with complex decoration:** Don't negotiate hard. They have no room. Either pay or simplify.

**On expensive products with simple decoration:** Negotiate. There's margin in the product that can subsidize the work.

---

## The Comparison Trap

| Supplier | Quote | Reality |
|----------|-------|---------|
| A: €800 | €50 digitizing + €5/cap × 150 | Cheapest until you add €180 shipping + 3 week queue |
| B: €1,200 | €80 digitizing + sample + €6.50/cap + shipping | Often the real answer when everything's included |
| C: €2,400 | €150 + rush fee + €14/cap + "premium guarantee" | For clients who need it Thursday and will pay anything |

---

## What to Ask

- "Is this price for your product or customer-supplied goods?"
- "What's the price if I buy the product from you?"
- "What's the all-in delivered price including digitizing, samples, shipping, and timeline?"

**Red flag:** Supplier pushes hard for "recommended products" but won't explain why. They're hiding margin structure.

---

*Part of The Textile Playbook*  
*Next: Lesson 3 — Design Optimization*

---

# Lesson 3: The Design That Looks Better and Costs Less

**Quick Summary:**  
That filled logo your designer loves? It costs 3× more and feels like a traffic sign on your chest. A few smart edits — outline instead of fill, simplified detail, strategic placement — and you get something that looks more premium for half the price.

**Why This Saves You:**  
A 15-minute design review can save €500 and produce better results.

---

## By Technique

### Embroidery
- **Filled designs:** High stitch count = slow, expensive, stiff, "patch-like" feel
- **Outline/satin stitch:** Lower count, faster, moves with fabric, premium look
- **Rule of thumb:** If the design is larger than 10cm, consider outline or partial fill

### DTF/Transfer
- **Large solid prints:** Stiffen fabric, can crack at folds, heavy feel
- **Strategic placement:** Chest logo vs full-back — half the size, 80% of the visibility
- **Breathability:** Large prints trap heat — bad for workwear, fine for bags

### Screen Print
- **Color limits:** Each color = screen = cost
- **Simplify gradients:** Spot colors or halftones instead of full CMYK

---

## The Feasibility Conversation

Before you finalize a design, ask: *"What's the most cost-effective way to achieve this look?"*

Suppliers won't suggest changes unless you ask. They'll quote your complex design at 3× the price and let you decide.

---

## Example

**Designer wants:** Full-back photorealistic image, DTF printed on hoodies  
**Reality:** €18/piece, feels like plastic, cracks after 10 washes

**Alternative:** 10cm chest logo, simplified vector, embroidered  
**Result:** €6/piece, looks premium, lasts years

**Same brand presence. Better execution. Lower cost.**

---

*Part of The Textile Playbook*  
*Next: Lesson 4 — The Three Questions That Expose Bad Suppliers*

---

# Lesson 4: The Three Questions That Expose Bad Suppliers

**Quick Summary:**  
Most suppliers aren't scammers — they're disorganized. These three questions expose where their process breaks down before you're holding a box of wrong-size polos with crooked logos.

**Why This Saves You:**  
Catches the "we'll figure it out" approach before it becomes your problem.

---

## The Real Risk Categories

| Risk Category | What Actually Goes Wrong | Cost |
|---------------|-------------------------|------|
| **Existence** | Ghost company, deposits disappear, nothing ships | 100% loss + deadline blown |
| **Product** | Wrong sizes, poor quality fabric, color mismatch vs. sample | Rewrite or unusable stock |
| **Decoration** | Logo size/shifted, wrong colors, messy backside on embroidery | Unusable, client rejection |
| **Delivery** | Late, rushed packing, no quality check, logos not cleaned | Missed event + bad first impression |
| **Service** | Unreachable when problems arise, no prototyping, rigid process | No path to fix errors |

**Good news:** Most reputable suppliers have solved the first two (existence/product). The danger zone is **decoration + delivery + service** — where promises meet reality.

---

## The Three Questions

### Question 1: "Walk me through your logo approval process — what do I see before production starts?"

| Answer Quality | What It Means |
|----------------|---------------|
| **Strong** | Digital proof within 24h, physical sample on actual fabric for orders over €500, final production approval checkpoint |
| **Medium** | PDF proof only, screen calibration risk |
| **Weak** | "Just send us the file" or "We don't do proofs" |

**The gap:** Screen colors ≠ thread colors. Navy on your monitor becomes purple on their machine.

---

### Question 2: "What does your quality check step look like?"

| Answer Quality | What It Means |
|----------------|---------------|
| **Strong** | Every piece checked, loose threads trimmed, backside support removed, steamed/pressed, individually bagged |
| **Medium** | Spot-checking from each batch |
| **Weak** | "The embroiderer checks their own work" or "We trust our process" |

**Red flags:** "No time for individual checks on large orders" — quality scales down with quantity.

---

### Question 3: "If I need a last-minute change, how do I reach you and how fast do you respond?"

| Answer Quality | What It Means |
|----------------|---------------|
| **Strong** | Named team, phone/Signal/WhatsApp, under 2 hours response, production manager escalation for urgent issues |
| **Medium** | Email only, 24h response |
| **Weak** | "Leave a message, someone will get back to you" |

**The gap:** No named contact = watching deadlines evaporate while "someone" eventually checks email.

---

## Scoring Rubric

| Question | 2 points | 1 point | 0 points |
|----------|----------|---------|----------|
| Approval process | Physical + digital proof | Digital only | No proof |
| Quality check | Every piece, finishing included | Spot check | No check |
| Responsiveness | Named contact, fast channel, prototyping available | Email-only, 24h | No named contact, vague |

**Total:**
- **6 points:** Solid operational foundation
- **4-5 points:** Manageable with explicit written agreements
- **0-3 points:** High risk

---

*Part of The Textile Playbook*  
*Next: Lesson 5 — When Cheap Becomes Expensive*

---

# Lesson 5: When Cheap Becomes Expensive

**Quick Summary:**  
That €3 cap quote looks like a win until you're explaining to your client why their logo is peeling off after three washes. The real cost isn't the price tag — it's what happens after.

**Why This Saves You:**  
Learn to spot the five cheap traps before you fall in. Save the relationship, not just the budget line.

---

## The Five Cheap Traps

### Trap 1: The Peeling Logo (Durability vs. Price)

**The pitch:** "Same design, €3 vs €7. Big savings on 500 pieces!"

**The reality:**
- €3: DTF on cheap cotton, heat-pressed at lower temp
- €7: Embroidery on quality fabric, proper stitch density

**The math:**
- Cheap: 500 × €3 = €1,500 + replacement €1,500 + damaged relationship
- Quality: 500 × €7 = €3,500, client happy, reorders 2,000 next quarter

**The rule:** Cheap becomes expensive when the item is meant to last.

---

### Trap 2: The Rush Fee Surprise (Timeline vs. Price)

**"We can do it in 3 days, no extra charge."**

**What they didn't mention:** Skipping quality check, outsourcing to unaccountable shops, no time to fix if wrong.

**The real cost:** Your sleep, your stress level, your professional credibility.

---

### Trap 3: The Hidden Setup (Quote vs. Total)

**Sticker: €4.50/piece**

**Actual:** €4.50 + €80 digitizing + €50 color changes + €60 rush + €120 shipping + €40 sample = €6.25/piece

**The rule:** Always ask for "all-in delivered price." Sticker price is fiction.

---

### Trap 4: The Single-Point-of-Failure (Supplier Reliability)

**"We're a small shop, personal service, great prices!"**

**The risk:** One embroiderer, no backup. If sick, your order stops. If overwhelmed, you're waiting.

**The rule:** Cheap small shops are fine for small, non-critical orders. For mission-critical work, you need operational redundancy.

---

### Trap 5: The Correction Cascade (Error Compounding)

**"We'll fix it, no problem!"**

**The reality:** 2 weeks to fix, €200 shipping back and forth, client gets half on time, you spend 10 hours on emails.

**The rule:** One mistake is fixable. A pattern of mistakes is a supplier who doesn't have their process sorted.

---

## When Cheap Is Actually Fine

- One-time events (giveaways, conference bags)
- Short lifespan expected (cotton bags)
- Non-critical branding (internal shirts)
- Ample time buffer (2 weeks to fix if needed)
- Supplier history (you know their "cheap" is "reliable")

---

## The True Cost Formula

**Price × Risk Factor = True Cost**

| Factor | Multiplier | Applies When |
|--------|-----------|--------------|
| Client-facing | ×2 | Client logo, client event |
| Deadline-critical | ×1.5 | Event date, no buffer |
| Quality-sensitive | ×1.5 | Workwear, long-term use |
| Single supplier | ×1.3 | No backup option |

---

## The "One-Third Rule"

- **Bottom third:** Cutting corners you haven't discovered yet
- **Middle third:** Fair price, fair value, reasonable expectation
- **Top third:** Premium pricing, maybe premium value, maybe just ego

**Start with middle third.** Build relationships.

---

*Part of The Textile Playbook*  
*Next: Lesson 6 — Timeline Management*

---

# Lesson 6: Timeline Management — Why "Next Week" Means Different Things to Different Suppliers

**Quick Summary:**  
Rush fees, realistic deadlines, and the seasonal chaos that turns "2 weeks" into "next month." Learn to read supplier timelines before they cost you the client relationship.

**Why This Saves You:**  
Every rushed order is a risk multiplier. The fee isn't the problem — the lack of buffer is.

---

## The Rush Fee Structure

| Timeline | Fee Multiplier | When It Applies |
|----------|---------------|-----------------|
| **Standard (3-4 weeks)** | 1.0× | Baseline, planned orders |
| **Expedited (2 weeks)** | 1.25-1.5× | Most suppliers can accommodate |
| **Rush (1 week)** | 1.5-2.0× | Requires dedicated machines |
| **Emergency (3 days)** | 2.0-3.0× | Or "impossible" — depending on supplier |

**The catch:** Rush fees don't guarantee quality. They guarantee speed. The shortcut often skips the QC step that catches errors.

---

## What's Actually Possible

### Embroidery
- **Small order (50-100 pcs):** 5-7 days standard, 3 days rush
- **Large order (500+ pcs):** 2-3 weeks standard, 1 week rush (if machines available)
- **Hard limit:** Machine capacity. A 12-head machine can embroider ~500 caps/day. If they're booked, they're booked.

### Screen Print / DTF
- **Small order:** 3-5 days standard, 2 days rush
- **Large order:** 1-2 weeks standard, 1 week rush
- **Hard limit:** Setup time. Each color = screen = setup. More colors = longer setup.

### "In Stock" vs. "We Can Source It"
- **In stock:** Product is in their warehouse. Timeline is decoration only.
- **Sourced:** Product comes from wholesaler. Add 3-7 days for delivery.
- **Custom/imported:** Product comes from manufacturer. Add 2-6 weeks.

**The lie:** "We can get those jackets." Translation: "We know where to order them." Add the shipping time.

---

## Seasonal Delays (European Market)

| Period | Impact | Mitigation |
|--------|--------|------------|
| **August summer holidays** | Most European suppliers closed 2-4 weeks | Plan around August, order by July 15 |
| **Christmas/New Year** | Queue stretches, rush fees spike | Order by November 15 |
| **Easter week** | Production slows, variable dates | Check calendar, add buffer |
| **Trade show season** | Suppliers prioritize large orders | Small orders wait |

**Reality:** Your "urgent" order in late January is competing with 6 weeks of backed-up demand.

---

## When to Pay Rush Fees vs. Push Back on Client

**Pay the fee when:**
- Client's deadline is immovable (event date, launch)
- Order is small enough that rush fee is <10% of total
- You've worked with supplier before and trust their rush quality

**Push back when:**
- Client is compressing timeline unnecessarily ("we just decided")
- Rush fee exceeds 25% of order value
- Supplier has no rush track record with you

**The script:**  
"We can meet Thursday, but it requires a rush fee of €X and carries quality risk. I recommend we target Monday for the same result at standard price. What's driving the Thursday deadline?"

**Translation:** You're not saying no. You're making them own the risk.

---

## Reading Supplier Timelines

### "Should be fine" = Uncommitted
- No specific date
- No confirmation process
- **Risk:** High

### "We'll confirm after deposit" = Delay tactic
- Timeline unknown until you're committed
- **Risk:** Medium-High

### "Delivery date: [specific date], with checkpoints on [dates]" = Professional
- Clear milestones
- Accountability built in
- **Risk:** Low

---

## The Buffer Rule

**Client says:** "We need these by Friday."  
**You hear:** "We need these by Thursday morning."  
**You tell supplier:** "We need these by Wednesday EOD."  
**You plan:** Delivery Tuesday (1 day buffer for fixes).

**Three-tier timeline:**
1. **Client deadline** (immovable external constraint)
2. **Your commitment** (1-2 days before, for fixes)
3. **Supplier delivery** (2-3 days before, for transport/issues)

**The math:** 2 days buffer reduces stress by 80%. Worth it every time.

---

*Part of The Textile Playbook*  
*Next: Lesson 7 — The Prototype Investment*

---

# Lesson 7: The Prototype Investment — Why €30 Now Saves €2,000 Later

**Quick Summary:**  
Sampling isn't optional for anything that matters. A €30 prototype eliminates 80% of pre-production risk before you're committed to 500 pieces.

**Why This Saves You:**  
The €30 prototype is insurance. Skip it when you can afford to be wrong.

---

## When to Prototype (Non-Negotiable)

| Situation | Why It Matters |
|-----------|----------------|
| **First order with new supplier** | You don't know their interpretation of your files |
| **New technique or fabric** | Drape, weight, color behave differently than expected |
| **Color-critical work** | Brand colors must match — screens lie |
| **Complex placement** | Chest + sleeve + back alignment requires precision |
| **Rush timeline** | No buffer for fixes if it's wrong |
| **Client-facing / high visibility** | Errors are public and expensive |

**The test:** "If this goes wrong, what's my exposure?"  
High exposure = prototype. Low exposure = maybe skip.

---

## What a Prototype Should Include

### Physical Sample Checklist
- [ ] **Size/fit:** Actual garment in target size (not just "size L" but "this brand's size L")
- [ ] **Fabric hand:** Weight, texture, drape — does it match expectation?
- [ ] **Color accuracy:** Thread/ink color vs. brand spec (Pantone or physical reference)
- [ ] **Logo placement:** Precise position, size, alignment
- [ ] **Decoration quality:** Stitch density, thread tension, backing finish
- [ ] **Label/tags:** Care instructions, size label, branding

### Digital Proof (Not Enough)
PDF proofs show: layout, rough size, position.  
PDF proofs don't show: color on actual fabric, texture, weight, drape, decoration feel.

**Rule:** PDF proof for digital approval. Physical prototype for production go-ahead.

---

## How to Evaluate a Prototype

### The 5-Minute Check
1. **Visual:** Does it look like the brief? (Size, placement, color)
2. **Tactile:** Does it feel premium or cheap? (Fabric weight, decoration hand)
3. **Functional:** Does it wear well? (Try it on, move around, check comfort)
4. **Detail:** Any loose threads, crooked lines, backing showing?
5. **Compare:** Side-by-side with reference (previous order, sample from another supplier, brand spec)

### The Red Flags
| Issue | What It Means |
|-------|---------------|
| Color "close enough" | Will drift further in production |
| Placement "about there" | No precision in their process |
| Loose threads | No finishing step |
| "That's just the sample" | Production won't be better |

---

## Prototype-to-Production Drift

**The risk:** Sample looks great. Production doesn't match.

**Why it happens:**
- Different machine/operator for production run
- Supplier used "sample-grade" materials for prototype
- No quality standard documented — sample was luck

**The fix:**
1. **Approve the prototype in writing** — photo evidence, specific notes
2. **Require production match approved sample** — contractual language
3. **Mid-production check** — visit or request photos of first 10 pieces

**The nuclear option:** "Production must match approved prototype or full re-run at supplier cost."

---

## The €30 Math

**Scenario A: Prototype**
- Cost: €30
- Time: +1 week
- Risk: Low (80% of issues caught)
- Rework needed: 5% of orders

**Scenario B: No Prototype**
- Cost: €0
- Time: -1 week (seems faster)
- Risk: High (80% of issues go live)
- Rework needed: 40% of orders × €2,000 average = €800 expected cost

**Expected value:** €30 prototype saves €770 per order on average (for high-exposure orders).

---

## Pro Types: When You Need More Than One

| Prototype | When to Use | Cost |
|-----------|-------------|------|
| **Digital mockup** | Initial approval, layout confirmation | Free/€10 |
| **Single physical** | Standard orders, repeat suppliers | €20-50 |
| **Size run** | Garments (S, M, L, XL) to check fit across range | €50-150 |
| **Color/technique matrix** | Testing 3 colors × 2 techniques before deciding | €100-300 |
| **Pre-production sample** | First 5 pieces from actual production run | Cost of goods |

---

## The "Can't Afford a Prototype" Fallacy

**Client:** "We don't have time/budget for a sample."  
**Translation:** "We can't afford to get this wrong, but we're not going to verify it's right."

**Your response:** "I understand the pressure. Here's the risk: if color/position is off, we're looking at a full re-run at €X and Y weeks delay. The prototype is €30 insurance against that. Worth 10 minutes to discuss?"

**Frame it:** Not as delay/cost. As risk management.

---

*Part of The Textile Playbook*  
*Next: Lesson 8 — When Things Go Wrong*

---

# Lesson 8: When Things Go Wrong — How to Fix Without Destroying Everything

**Quick Summary:**  
Error happened. Client is angry. Supplier is defensive. How to fix without breaking the relationship or your margin.

**Why This Saves You:**  
Every error is data. The question is whether you pay tuition once or keep repeating the class.

---

## Immediate Triage (First 30 Minutes)

### Step 1: Assess the Damage
| Category | Action | Timeline |
|----------|--------|----------|
| **Total loss** | Unusable, unsalvageable, embarrassing | Start emergency sourcing |
| **Partial loss** | Some items okay, some wrong | Sort, salvage good, fix/replace bad |
| **Cosmetic only** | Embarrassing but functional | Can client live with it? |
| **Client doesn't know yet** | You found it first | Time to fix before they see it |

### Step 2: Document Everything
- Photos of the problem (multiple angles, close-up, context)
- Photos of what was ordered (brief, approved sample)
- Timeline of events (when ordered, when approved, when delivered)
- Communications (emails, messages, what was promised)

**Golden rule:** Document before accusing. Facts first, emotion second.

---

## Supplier Accountability: What They Owe vs. Good Will

### They Owe (Contractual)
- **Wrong item:** Full replacement or refund
- **Wrong color:** Re-run if outside agreed tolerance
- **Wrong placement:** Re-run if outside brief specs
- **Missed deadline:** Rush re-run at their cost or refund

### Good Will (Relationship)
- **"Close enough" color:** If within industry tolerance, they don't technically owe re-run
- **Minor quality issues:** Loose threads, slight alignment — finishing fixes, not re-run
- **Your error in brief:** If you approved the wrong thing, they don't owe correction

### The Conversation
**Don't:** "You screwed this up completely." (Defensive response guaranteed)  
**Do:** "There's a gap between what we approved and what arrived. Here's the documentation. What's your path to resolution?"

**Frame:** Problem → Evidence → Resolution request. Not blame → anger → demand.

---

## Client Communication: How to Say "We Fucked Up"

### The Script (Your Error)
"We've identified an issue with the order. [Specific problem]. This was [our error/supplier error]. We're [specific fix] and [timeline]. Impact to you: [what client actually cares about]."

**Example:**  
"We've identified a color mismatch on the jackets. The supplier's thread color is off from the approved sample. We're sourcing a re-run with correct color, delivery Thursday. You have enough stock for Tuesday's soft launch, full inventory for Friday's event."

**Key elements:**
1. **Acknowledge** — no hiding
2. **Specify** — exactly what's wrong
3. **Own** — whose error (if yours, say so)
4. **Fix** — concrete action
5. **Timeline** — when resolved
6. **Impact** — what they actually care about

### What Clients Actually Care About
- **Their event:** Will they have what they need when they need it?
- **Their reputation:** Will anyone know there was a problem?
- **Your reliability:** Will this happen again?

**Address these directly.** Not your process, not supplier drama.

---

## Emergency Sourcing: When Plan B Becomes Plan A

### The 48-Hour Sourcing Plan
**Hour 0:** Accept original plan is dead  
**Hour 1-4:** Contact 3 alternative suppliers with: specific need, quantity, hard deadline, budget  
**Hour 4-12:** Evaluate quotes (not just price — can they actually deliver?)  
**Hour 12-24:** Approve sample/simplified proof if possible  
**Hour 24-48:** Production + express shipping  
**Hour 48:** Delivery (hopefully)

### Who to Call
- **Your backup suppliers** (the ones you vetted but didn't use)
- **Local shops** (higher cost, faster turnaround)
- **Same-city competitors** (if supplier can't deliver, who can?)
- **Wholesalers with decoration partners** (buy blank, rush decorate locally)

---

## The Correction Cascade: Stopping the Spiral

### Don't Do This
1. Error discovered
2. Supplier promises fix
3. Fix is also wrong
4. Now you're at deadline
5. Panic source at 3× cost
6. Client loses confidence

### Do This Instead
1. Error discovered
2. **Pause:** Is this fixable or do we need Plan B?
3. If fixable: Supplier re-runs with your supervision (mid-production check)
4. If not fixable: **Immediately** activate Plan B sourcing
5. Keep client informed at every checkpoint
6. Deliver something — even if not perfect — on time

**The rule:** A partial solution on time beats a perfect solution late.

---

## Learning from Failure: The Post-Mortem That Actually Helps

### 5 Questions (Answer Honestly)
1. **Where did the process break?** (Brief? Approval? Production? Communication?)
2. **What was the early warning?** (Did we miss a signal?)
3. **What would have prevented this?** (Prototype? Different supplier? Better brief?)
4. **What will we do differently next time?** (Specific, actionable)
5. **Is this a supplier problem or a process problem?** (Wrong partner vs. wrong system)

### Document It
Create a "Lessons Learned" file. One page per significant failure. Review before similar orders.

**The pattern:** Same failure twice = you didn't learn. Third time = you don't care.

---

## Protecting the Relationship

### With Supplier
- **Separate the error from the person:** "This shipment had quality issues" not "You're unreliable"
- **Give them a path to fix:** Most want to make it right
- **Know when to walk:** Repeated failures = wrong partner, not fixable

### With Client
- **Own what you should own:** If you approved the wrong thing, say so
- **Protect them from supplier drama:** They don't care whose fault, they care about fix
- **Rebuild confidence:** Next few orders must be flawless

### With Yourself
- **Don't take it personally:** Errors happen in complex supply chains
- **Don't minimize it:** "It wasn't that bad" = you'll repeat it
- **Don't catastrophize:** One error doesn't make you incompetent

---

## The Nuclear Options

### When to Demand Full Re-run at Supplier Cost
- **They deviated from approved sample** (documented proof)
- **Missed deadline with no proactive communication** (ghosted you)
- **Material substitution without approval** (different fabric, lower grade)

### When to Eat the Cost Yourself
- **You approved the wrong thing** (signed off on error)
- **"Close enough" wasn't defined** (tolerance never specified)
- **Timeline was impossible, you pushed anyway** (unrealistic expectations)

---

*Part of The Textile Playbook*  
*Next: Lesson 9 — Pricing Benchmarks*

# Lesson 9: Pricing Benchmarks That Actually Exist

**Quick Summary:**  
Real numbers from the German/EU textile market — what embroidery, screen print, and DTF actually cost per piece, what setup fees look like, and where suppliers make their margin. No more guessing if €4 or €12 is fair.

**Why This Saves You:**  
Walk into a supplier negotiation knowing what "fair" looks like. Spot the padded quote before you commit. Calculate true cost in your head before the proposal lands.

---

## Embroidery Pricing: Per-Piece by Stitch Count

| Stitch Count Range | Per-Piece Price* | Typical Applications |
|-------------------|------------------|---------------------|
| **0-5,000 stitches** | €2.50-4.00 | Small chest logos, text, simple shapes |
| **5,000-10,000 stitches** | €4.00-6.50 | Medium logos, standard cap embroidery |
| **10,000-20,000 stitches** | €6.50-10.00 | Large back designs, detailed artwork |
| **20,000+ stitches** | €10.00-16.00 | Complex full-chest, oversized designs |

\* Prices per location. Each additional location (e.g., sleeve + chest) = additional charge.

**Stitch count examples:**
- Company name, small: ~3,000 stitches
- Medium logo with detail: ~8,000 stitches
- Large detailed emblem: ~15,000 stitches
- Full-chest photorealistic: ~25,000+ stitches

**The math:** Most standard business logos land in the 5-10k range. If your quote assumes 15k stitches, ask why.

---

## Screen Print Pricing: Per-Piece by Color Count

| Color Count | Per-Piece Price* | Minimum Order | Notes |
|-------------|-----------------|---------------|-------|
| **1 color** | €1.50-3.00 | 50-100 pieces | Cheapest at volume, fastest setup |
| **2-3 colors** | €3.00-5.50 | 50 pieces | Most common for branded apparel |
| **4-6 colors** | €5.50-8.50 | 100 pieces | Complex designs, longer setup |
| **6+ colors** | €8.50-14.00+ | 100-250 pieces | Consider DTF instead at this point |

\* Prices assume standard cotton or cotton-blend garments. Premium fabrics may add 10-20%.

**Screen economics:**
- Each color = one screen = €25-50 setup fee
- 4-color design = €100-200 in screen fees alone
- This is why screen print favors volume — setup cost gets amortized

---

## DTF/Transfer Pricing: Per-Piece by Size

| Size Category | Dimensions | Per-Piece Price | Best For |
|--------------|------------|-----------------|----------|
| **Small** | <10cm (4") | €2.00-4.00 | Chest logos, small text |
| **Medium** | 10-20cm | €4.00-7.00 | Standard full-chest, back designs |
| **Large** | >20cm | €7.00-12.00 | Oversized prints, full-back designs |

**DTF advantages:**
- No setup fees (or minimal €20-50 film charge)
- Unlimited colors and gradients
- Works on almost any fabric
- No minimum order quantities

**DTF trade-offs:**
- Less durable than embroidery
- "Plastic" feel compared to screen print
- Heat-press required (marks some fabrics)

---

## Base Product Costs (Wholesale to Decoration Shop)

| Product Category | Price Range | Notes |
|-----------------|-------------|-------|
| **Caps** | €1.50-4.00 | €1.50 = basic cotton, €4 = premium structured |
| **T-shirts** | €2.00-8.00 | €2 = promo quality, €8 = premium retail weight |
| **Polos** | €8.00-15.00 | Pique knit standard, jersey €1-2 less |
| **Sweatshirts/Hoodies** | €12.00-25.00 | Fleece weight drives price |
| **Jackets (softshell)** | €20.00-40.00 | Waterproof adds €5-10 |
| **Jackets (padded)** | €25.00-50.00 | Down/synthetic fill premium |
| **Cotton Bags** | €2.00-5.00 | €2 = thin promo, €5 = heavy canvas |
| **Workwear Pants** | €15.00-35.00 | Industry-specific (cargo, safety) premium |

**The margin game:**
- On a €3 cap: Decoration shop makes margin on decoration only
- On a €30 jacket: Product margin subsidizes decoration work
- This is why €150 digitizing hurts on caps but disappears on jackets

---

## Setup Fees: The Hidden Cost Layer

| Fee Type | Typical Range | When It Applies |
|----------|---------------|---------------|
| **Digitizing (embroidery)** | €30-150 | First-time logo, per design |
| **Screen making** | €25-50 per color | Screen print, per color |
| **Film/output (DTF)** | €20-80 per design | Digital transfers |
| **Sample/mockup** | €20-50 | Physical sample before production |
| **Color changes** | €10-25 per change | Embroidery: switching thread colors mid-run |
| **Digitizing revision** | €20-50 | Changes after approval |

**Digitizing pricing factors:**
- €30-50: Simple text, basic shapes, <5k stitches
- €50-80: Standard logos, 5-10k stitches
- €80-120: Detailed artwork, 10-15k stitches
- €120-150: Complex designs, gradients, 15k+ stitches

**The catch:** Digitizing is a one-time fee *per design*. Same logo on 50 items or 5,000 — digitizing is paid once. Keep the file.

---

## Rush Fees: Standard Multipliers

| Timeline | Multiplier | What You're Paying For |
|----------|------------|----------------------|
| **Standard (3-4 weeks)** | 1.0× | Normal queue, normal process |
| **Expedited (2 weeks)** | 1.2-1.3× | Priority scheduling, longer shifts |
| **Rush (5-7 days)** | 1.5× | Dedicated machines, overtime labor |
| **Emergency (3-4 days)** | 2.0× | Stop other work, weekend hours |
| **Panic (1-2 days)** | 2.5-3.0× | Or "impossible" — depends on relationship |

**Rush fee reality check:**
- A €1,000 order at 1.5× rush = €1,500 total
- The €500 covers overtime, disrupted scheduling, and risk premium
- It does *not* guarantee better quality — often the opposite

---

## Shipping: Typical Ranges

| Order Size | Standard Shipping | Express Shipping |
|------------|-------------------|------------------|
| **Small (1-50 pcs)** | €15-35 | €35-80 |
| **Medium (50-250 pcs)** | €35-75 | €80-150 |
| **Large (250-1,000 pcs)** | €75-150 | €150-300 |
| **Pallet (>1,000 pcs)** | €150-300 | €300-600 |

**Shipping variables:**
- Distance: Within Germany vs. EU vs. cross-border
- Weight: Caps vs. hoodies vs. jackets
- Insurance: Typically 1-2% of goods value
- Customs: Non-EU origin adds duties + clearance fees

---

## Real Example: The 100-Hoodie Order

**Client wants:** 100 premium hoodies, chest logo, delivered in 2 weeks.

**The quote breakdown:**

| Line Item | Cost | Notes |
|-----------|------|-------|
| Hoodies (€18 wholesale) | €1,800 | €18 × 100 |
| Embroidery 8k stitches | €550 | €5.50 × 100 |
| Digitizing | €60 | One-time |
| Rush fee (2-week) | €305 | 1.25× on decoration |
| Shipping (DE national) | €85 | 3-day freight |
| **Total** | **€2,800** | €28/hoodie delivered |

**The comparison trap:**
- Supplier A: €2,400 (excluded digitizing + used 2-week standard)
- Supplier B: €2,800 (all-inclusive, realistic timeline)
- Supplier C: €3,400 (added "premium quality" padding)

**The real answer:** Supplier B. Supplier A has hidden costs. Supplier C is fishing.

---

## The Rule

**"Fair price" = Product cost + Decoration cost + Setup fees + Reasonable margin - Volume discount**

**Quick calculator:**
1. Take the base product price (wholesale)
2. Add decoration cost from tables above
3. Add setup fees amortized across quantity
4. Add 30-50% supplier margin
5. Add shipping

**Example:** 200 polos + 6k stitch embroidery
- Polos: €10 × 200 = €2,000
- Embroidery: €4 × 200 = €800
- Digitizing: €50 ÷ 200 = €0.25
- Supplier margin (40%): €1,540
- Shipping: €75
- **Fair price: ~€4,465** or €22.33/piece delivered

If the quote is €3,500 — ask where they're cutting. If it's €6,000 — ask why.

---

## The "All-In" Ask

Never negotiate on sticker price. Negotiate on delivered cost.

**Say this:**
> "I need 150 items, chest logo, delivered to [city] by [date]. What's the all-in price including digitizing, samples, shipping, and any rush fees?"

**Then compare apples to apples:**
- Same product tier (compare premium to premium)
- Same decoration complexity (same stitch count, same colors)
- Same timeline (standard vs. standard)
- Same inclusions (samples? shipping? insurance?)

---

## Red Flag Pricing

| Quote | Likely Issue |
|-------|-------------|
| Embroidery at €1.50/piece | Misquoted stitch count, will revise up |
| "Free digitizing" | Baked into per-piece price, or low quality |
| "No rush fee" | Standard price already includes it, or quality risk |
| Screen print at DTF prices | Wrong technique for the volume |
| Shipping "to be determined" | Hidden €100+ surprise coming |

---

*Part of The Textile Playbook*  
*Next: Lesson 10 — Supplier Relationship Management (or Lesson 11 — Seasonal Strategy)*

---

*The Textile Playbook — First Edition*

*For questions: contact [to be added]*
