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Activewear Manufacturer Case Study | Dual Supply Chain Strategy

Activewear Manufacturer Case Study | Dual Supply Chain Strategy

Tabla de contenido

Fabricante de ropa deportiva · Dual Sourcing Strategy · Cost Optimization · OEM Sportswear Production · USA + Asia Supply Chain

Growth Snapshot

Métrico Resultado
Revenue Trend at Inflection Point -20% interanual
Retail Price Range (Polainas) $90–$130 USD
Campaign Revenue (App Channel) $220K
Core High-Value Customer Base 50K+ Customers

The Starting Point

different types of fabric in samples room

This brand had spent years building its positioning around a domestic manufacturing model in Los Angeles.

“Made in USA” was not a marketing angle — it was part of the brand identity and pricing structure.

Sin embargo, con el tiempo, the cost structure created pressure:

  • Domestic production costs were significantly higher than overseas alternatives
  • New competitors entered the market with visually similar products at much lower retail prices
  • Revenue began to decline as price-sensitive customers shifted away

The challenge was no longer product quality. It was structural margin competitiveness.

Manufacturing Challenges

sewing accessories

1. Margin pressure without damaging brand equity

Any shift in production geography risked being perceived as a downgrade.
For a premium activewear brand, even perception changes can affect customer retention and resale behavior.

The transition needed to preserve:

  • Product quality consistency
  • Customer trust in core SKUs
  • Brand positioning in premium segment

2. Replicating a proprietary fabric system

The brand’s signature fabric blend (nylon / polypro / spandex combination) was central to its performance identity.

Reproducing this outside the original domestic supply base required:

  • Multiple fabric development iterations
  • Testing for compression, moisture behavior, and stretch recovery
  • Validation against existing product benchmarks

This was not a sourcing task — it was a fabric engineering exercise.

3. SKU prioritization under limited transition capacity

Not all product lines could be transitioned at once.

We had to prioritize:

  • High-volume SKUs driving revenue pressure
  • Low-risk categories for early migration
  • Products with minimal design sensitivity from customers

This ensured margin recovery started early while protecting core brand perception.

What We Built Together

Women's tight-fitting jumpsuit
Women

1. Dual supply chain structure

We implemented a two-tier production model:

  • Domestic production (EE.UU): core signature leggings requiring specific technical positioning
  • Asia-based OEM production: new categories including rest-day wear, swim, and accessories

This allowed the brand to maintain its identity while improving cost structure.

2. Product repositioning without brand dilution

To avoid conflict with “Made in USA” positioning, we adjusted labeling strategy:

  • Shifted from origin-based messaging
  • To product-based value messaging (design + performance focus)

This reduced customer friction while maintaining transparency.

3. Phased SKU migration strategy

We introduced production changes in controlled phases:

  • Phase 1: non-core SKUs moved first
  • Phase 2: high-volume repeat products optimized for cost efficiency
  • Phase 3: evaluation of remaining domestic-only items

This minimized disruption while maximizing early margin recovery.

Results

  • +18 percentage points gross margin improvement on transitioned SKUs
  • No quality complaints reported post-transition
  • Improved cash flow enabled expansion into app + wholesale channels

Key Takeaway

activewear manufacturing process

Supply chain structure is not just an operational decision — it directly defines brand scalability.

The most successful brands are not the ones that keep a single manufacturing philosophy at all costs, but those that understand:

  • what must remain fixed to protect brand equity
  • what can be optimized to improve competitiveness

A manufacturing partner’s role is to help define that boundary clearly and execute it without compromising product integrity.

Why Brands Work with Deportes Sansan

Sansan Sports supports apparel brands with:

  • Dual sourcing supply chain strategies (EE.UU / Asia hybrid models)
  • OEM activewear production optimization
  • Fabric replication and development for existing brands
  • Cost structure optimization without brand repositioning loss
  • Scalable manufacturing for premium DTC brands

Bárbara Wong

Cofundador y líder comercial en SANSANSUN Sports, un fabricante de ropa deportiva impulsado por el diseño que se asocia con marcas globales en crecimiento.

 

Durante la última década, He trabajado estrechamente con los fundadores., diseñadores, y equipos de productos en toda Europa, Estados Unidos, y Medio Oriente, ayudándoles a convertir ideas en colecciones escalables. Mi atención no se centra sólo en la producción., sino en construir sistemas de productos repetibles que respalden el crecimiento de la marca a largo plazo..

 

Creo que la buena ropa deportiva no se crea por las tendencias o el precio., sino por la alineación de la tela, función, y experiencia de usuario. A través de nuestro sistema MDMD (Material–Diseño–Fabricación–Entrega), Ayudamos a las marcas a reducir el riesgo de desarrollo., mejorar la consistencia, y muévete más rápido con confianza.

 

en este blog, Comparto ideas desde la fábrica, casos reales de clientes, y pensamiento práctico sobre el desarrollo de productos, estrategia de tela, y desafíos de escala en la industria de la ropa deportiva.

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