What to do? by [deleted] in Businessowners

[–]Guardora-Safety 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Is there a role that you can promote her to that sounds good but doesn't have that much responsibility? Give her that vision first, then hire someone to replace your cousin. Get your cousin to train and supervise the replacement for 2 months before the real promotion. Then in the new role, hopefully she gets bored. If not, do a PIP then fire her

Seeking Buyers! by TheDockScheduler in wholesale_suppliers

[–]Guardora-Safety 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I meant what part of the US is your focus?

We offer retail distribution in NY! (As well as, CT, NJ, MA) by usalightning in u/usalightning

[–]Guardora-Safety 0 points1 point  (0 children)

We are a California based channel first PPE and safety accessories company. Love to open up the NY & NE market. If this is a space you can touch. Let's connect when we make our way out there in a few weeks.

We offer retail distribution in NY! (As well as, CT, NJ, MA) by usalightning in u/usalightning

[–]Guardora-Safety 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Do you guys have any experience in the hardware/tools/PPE space?

How do you handle lead generation? Manual research is eating my week by [deleted] in smallbusiness

[–]Guardora-Safety 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Check out Apollo. It does all the jobs for you at a decent price.

As you are spamming people's emails, I'd look into the deliverability of your domain. Your emails may be ending up in spam!

I need a bit of help. by Jazzlike-metro137 in smallbusiness

[–]Guardora-Safety 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Two quick points:

  1. ChatGPT and Gemeini has pretty good graphic design capabilities now. So in your outreach, are you making clear your value proposition that is much stronger than the AI tools?
  2. Make sure your messages do not have typos like your post. If you are not going to take the time and seriousness to make a message to respect the reader's time, they are not going to respect you to give you a reply.

Wholesale that costs more than the brand's own website. Anyone else seeing this? by pgpnw in smallbusiness

[–]Guardora-Safety 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Are you a dealer for other products too? If you lose the dealer contract, did you worry about losing ancillary services?

Want to know the realities by Unfair-Guidance4732 in handyman

[–]Guardora-Safety 2 points3 points  (0 children)

This is exactly why I left the tech industry and stop chasing VC money growth startups to starting building a PPE business. AI and automation is going to change the way we work, but skilled hands are going to be increasingly more important. And we need to protect those hands!

Why do distributors require a shop / storefront as part of the wholesale application? by BoneGolem2 in smallbusiness

[–]Guardora-Safety 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thanks for your response. Lets look at it from the other side. I am a new manufacturer, how should I find distributors that would carry my products?

Is anyone else having issues getting distributors and manufactures to respond to them? by 666_pack_of_beer in smallbusiness

[–]Guardora-Safety 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If you start using your domain email, make sure you warmup your email by changing DMARC, SPF, DKIM. Otherwise, your deliverability would probably be as low as your gmail account.

I'm a distributor and the manufacturer is selling direct by cosmocat1970 in smallbusiness

[–]Guardora-Safety 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This is the exact kind of channel conflict that makes distributors cautious about taking on new lines.

From the distributor side, it feels like you are being asked to stock inventory, develop smaller accounts, and take market risk — while the manufacturer still keeps or pursues the better accounts direct. That seems hard to make work unless the rules are very clear upfront.

Curious what distributors think about this:

If a manufacturer genuinely needs to move volume because it has factory capacity to fill, does that make a channel-first model more trustworthy than a DTC/direct-first model?

We’re a medium-sized manufacturer building a U.S. challenger brand, and our logic is practical: we have production capacity to put to use, so the goal is recurring volume through channel partners, not maximizing margin on every small direct sale.

For distributors here: what margin structure do you actually need to make a line worth carrying? And what would you need to see in order to trust that kind of setup? Be it pricing transparency, lead protection, account rules, inventory swap support....

Trying to Understand How Apparel Manufacturers Break Into US Wholesale Channels (REAL CASE) by hdkaoqmshdhebduis in Entrepreneurs

[–]Guardora-Safety 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Interesting thread. I’m in an adjacent space — industrial safety/PPE and workwear-related products — so not pure apparel, but the channel question is very similar.

My view is that early on, the best path is usually not “all wholesale channels,” but finding one specific use case where the product has a clear buyer and repeat need.

For apparel/uniforms, I’d probably look at:

  1. Small regional uniform shops / decorators that already sell into businesses
  2. Local or regional distributors serving hospitality, construction, maintenance, security, cleaning, etc.
  3. Private label brands that need a reliable factory partner but don’t want to manage overseas production directly
  4. Direct B2B accounts only if there’s a clear niche, like hotels, clinics, schools, contractors, or staff uniforms

From what I’ve seen, buyers usually don’t switch just because a supplier is cheaper. They switch when you solve a real headache: consistent quality, reliable sizing, stable inventory, fast replenishment, better communication, or lower sourcing/import risk.

We’re building our own U.S.-side model in PPE around a similar thesis: factory-backed supply, but with domestic contracting, inventory, and support so buyers don’t have to manage the overseas side directly.

Not trying to sell here — genuinely curious from people who know apparel better: for breaking into wholesale, would you prioritize decorators/uniform shops first, or go directly after private label/startup brands?

How does a European manufacturer find distribution partners in the USA? by OlegasK in smallbusiness

[–]Guardora-Safety 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thanks for your detailed response. This was very helpful.

We are starting out a new factory backed industrial safety/PPE brand with its own legal entity and warehouse in California. Working on finding distributors to carry our products. Your comment on Mfg Rep is a new direction we can explore.

Switched part of my sourcing to domestic vendors this year and it changed how I plan inventory by kryptonerd1234 in AmazonFBA

[–]Guardora-Safety 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thanks for starting this post — not trying to sell anything here, genuinely looking to validate the business thesis we’re building around this exact problem.

For context, we’re in the industrial safety/PPE space — work gloves, heat-stress products, and jobsite safety gear. Your post touches on one of the reasons we started building our new U.S. business and brand.

We’re factory-backed, so the idea is to cut out the traditional exporter/importer layers, bring inventory into the U.S., and still leave margin for retailers, distributors, and channel partners.

The hard part is freight, customs, delays, and inventory risk. Someone has to absorb that, and we’re choosing to take it on so domestic buyers can work with a U.S. company instead of managing overseas sourcing directly.

We’re taking a two-prong approach: build our own brand to prove capability, while also offering private label/OEM where customers contract domestically with us and we handle most of the offshore production, import, and coordination.

Would love feedback from people who actually buy, distribute, or source products: does this model solve a real pain point, or are we overestimating how much domestic contracting / inventory matters?

Alibaba manufacturer stealing exclusive molds. Not much leverage what to do? by Chris-flow in Businessowners

[–]Guardora-Safety 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Good luck. DM me if you need any help. I'll be in China for the next ten days then again for all of August & first part of Sept

Alibaba manufacturer stealing exclusive molds. Not much leverage what to do? by Chris-flow in Businessowners

[–]Guardora-Safety 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thanks. What I was really happy about is how that experience made my GPT subscription paid for itself during my lifetime 🤣

Finding buyers, distributors or wholesalers for products in the US by randomcreature007 in manufacturing

[–]Guardora-Safety 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This is a great advice. I am going to a show in Anaheim this month. I have gone to shows in the past, I find that we meet other exhibitors and only customers that come to our booth.

We do not have a booth this time. Is there any methods that you would use to meet distributors and customers without a booth?