Today, you live in an increasingly On-Demand world. You watch TV shows and movies On-Demand through streaming services, rent a car through Zipcar, and hail a ride through apps like Lyft. That same expectation—faster turnaround, more personalization, and less waste—is reshaping how retail products get made.
In 2026, On-Demand manufacturing is less of a “trend” and more of a practical response to modern retail realities: shorter product cycles, tighter cash flow, nearshoring and regional production strategies, and digital manufacturing tools that make small-batch and made-to-order production more viable. A similar transformation is happening in the manufacturing industry.
Key Takeaways
- On-Demand manufacturing can help you test demand and reduce overproduction by making items after (or closer to) the time of purchase.
- Lead times vary widely—timelines depend on product complexity, materials, location, and capacity.
- On-Demand can reduce the need to warehouse finished goods, but many businesses still hold some stock (packaging, safety stock, and returns).
- To make On-Demand work at scale, prioritize strong integrations (APIs), clear SLAs, and a returns/quality plan.
With the rise of technology and a shift in the way new products are introduced to the market, crowdfunding platforms like Kickstarter and Indiegogo can help connect retailers with early buyers—opening the door for new ideas to come to life without the need for a major upfront investment. This approach to launching and selling products has increased demand for faster, more flexible production options for retail businesses. One such option is On-Demand manufacturing.
To help you decide whether On-Demand manufacturing is right for your retail business, let’s take a deeper look at On-Demand manufacturing and its benefits.
What is On-Demand Manufacturing?
On-Demand manufacturing is advantageous for small businesses because of its low minimum order requirements. Low minimum order quantities (or MOQs) make inventory management more sustainable for retailers and small businesses.
On-Demand manufacturing also allows retailers to test the market before doubling down on inventory for a particular product, which can help eliminate markdowns and avoid brand dilution.
The Challenges of Traditional Manufacturing Models
Before we dig into more details about On-Demand manufacturing, it's beneficial to understand the traditional manufacturing supply chain that it replaces. The traditional manufacturing supply chain was built to support the demands of large businesses. Businesses and their product developers deal with manufacturers mostly by email and production facilities are often located overseas. There are high minimum order requirements (or penalties for ordering less than the MOQ) and lead times are long.
With traditional supply chain manufacturing, the time it takes to create a product—from design to delivery—can take several months, and it may take longer when production is overseas or when materials and capacity are constrained.
And because of the high MOQ of traditional supply chains, many retail businesses end up over-producing products. Over-production of inventory results in excess stock at the end of the season, markdowns, and a negative impact on the retailer’s margin. Not to mention it isn’t great for fashion waste and pollution impacts.
By using an On-Demand manufacturing process, retailers can avoid the obstacles mentioned above.
Manufacturing On-Demand can reduce or eliminate the need to warehouse finished goods. You can avoid getting stuck with excess inventory at the end of the season by manufacturing only the products that customers order. Depending on your model, you may still hold some inventory—like packaging, safety stock for bestsellers, replacement parts, or returns inventory. You also don’t deal with high minimum order requirements. This can reduce the need to markdown products to sell off stale inventory, cut back on over-production of finished products, and reduce wasted materials.
The right On-Demand manufacturing system can also help you improve speed to market. In some On-Demand setups, production and shipping can happen in days (timelines vary by product complexity, location, materials availability, and capacity).

Ecommerce giant Amazon has explored this manufacturing model as part of broader efforts to shorten fulfillment cycles. As a historical example, Amazon was granted a patent in April 2017 (US 9,623,578) describing an On-Demand apparel manufacturing approach.
"The goods will be manufactured in batches based on factors such as the customer shipping address," the patent reads. “By aggregating orders from various geographic locations and coordinating apparel assembly processes on a large scale, the embodiments provide new ways to increase efficiency in apparel manufacturing.”
While this patent is designed for clothing, the inventors believe this system could work for other categories and materials, including paper, plastic, leather, and rubber.
More recently, On-Demand and digital manufacturing have expanded beyond apparel into areas like custom packaging, personalized goods, and distributed production networks—often enabled by better ecommerce integrations, improved automation, and more regionalized supply chains.
The Advantages Of On-Demand Manufacturing
A recent article in the Sourcing Journal states: The win with On-Demand is two-fold: the customer gets exactly what they want, and the brand only has to make exactly what they want. That means little waste, no excess inventory, and no accounts receivable risk.
There are a number of benefits to the On-Demand manufacturing approach that makes it a more sustainable manufacturing option for retailers, including:
1. No Markdowns
Markdowns occur at the end of the season when a retailer still has stock of a particular style, color, or size that hasn’t sold and is no longer applicable for the next season. Rather than continuing to warehouse the inventory or keep it on the selling floor, many retailers offer discounts and promotions to sell through their inventory.
If you use On-Demand manufacturing, you eliminate the risk of having to markdown or discount products at the end of your selling season, which is especially helpful if you employ a no-discount strategy. You only have to manufacture what your customers order—which is more efficient and helps you save money.
2. Eliminate Waste
Manufacturing only what your customers order not only eliminates the need to discount excess inventory, but it also eliminates leftover materials.
Unfortunately, not every product is a "crowd pleaser" and manufacturing On-Demand means you don't have to make something before you know if it will sell. And less waste means more space in your warehouse and in your stores for popular products.
3. Quick Turnaround
The traditional manufacturing supply chain can have long lead times, depending on the product a retailer is making and whether you're manufacturing domestically or overseas. While it is reliant on the facility and the product, On-Demand manufacturing can shorten timelines significantly—and in some setups, production and shipping can happen in days.
4. Market Testing: React to Your Customers
Test your product and find your product-market fit before you spend more money on your idea. Having no minimum order requirement means you can make one piece at a time. Create one product, list it on your website, show your friends, gauge interest, and then decide if it's worth investing more time and money into your idea.
5. Seamless Proto Sampling
Traditional manufacturers may charge additional fees for prototyping and samples, and some may not offer sampling services for small runs. Many On-Demand services take the headache out of sampling, making it more accessible for retailers that are launching a new product.
6. Easier Inventory Management
Many On-Demand manufacturing companies provide support through the entire product lifecycle by acting as the warehouse and inventory management service for your finished products.
If you choose to make a limited quantity of inventory upfront, this can eliminate the time and costs of shipping products from your manufacturer to your warehouse. Shipping orders directly from the manufacturer can mean faster shipping times, which often makes for happier, more loyal customers.
7. No Minimum Order Quantity (or MOQ)
Whether you’re making your first sample or fulfilling an order of 100 units, On-Demand manufacturers can meet your order requirements quickly.
As your business grows and your needs change, you can continue to manufacture with the same facility as you scale. On-Demand manufacturing requires no MOQ so you never have to order more than you can afford or need at any given time.
8. Better Cash Flow
Get your money out of your inventory and improve your cash flow. Free up valuable dollars to spend on sales and marketing efforts that will help you increase sales revenue and ultimately grow your business.
When compared to manufacturing product in bulk, manufacturing On-Demand may result in a higher cost price per unit. But, the advantage is that you have consistent margins and know exactly what your profit will be for each unit sold. You don't risk getting stuck with the end of the season inventory that you have to markdown or absorb.
For example, if you sell a top for $50 retail and it cost you $25 to make (COGS), your gross margin for one unit is 50% or $25 gross profit per unit.
- $50 (retail price) − $25 (COGS) = $25 (gross profit per unit)
- ($50 − $25) ÷ $50 = 50% (gross margin)
If you have to mark down the same top at the end of the season by 30%, you will dilute your gross profit and gross margin.
- $50 (original retail price) × 0.30 (30% discount) = $15 (discount)
- $50 (original retail price) − $15 (discount) = $35 (retail after discount)
- $35 (retail after discount) − $25 (COGS) = $10 (gross profit per unit after discount)
- ($35 − $25) ÷ $35 ≈ 28.6% (gross margin after discount)
Based on the example above, if you choose On-Demand manufacturing, you can avoid end-of-season markdown risk and keep margins more consistent—rather than taking the risk of cutting your gross margin from 50% to about 28.6%.
Please note, these values are placeholders to show simplified gross margin calculations. This example excludes shipping, duties/taxes, payment processing fees, returns, chargebacks, and operating overhead (like labor, rent, and marketing), so it shouldn’t be treated as financial advice.
9. Sourcing and Material Management
Many On-Demand manufacturers offer full-service packages including sourcing and ordering materials, inventory management, and handling inbound shipments of other items needed to produce your products. In some cases, On-Demand manufacturers also offer design services.
10. Order Fulfillment and Shipping
The final step in the product lifecycle is shipping a purchased product to your customers—On-Demand manufacturers can take care of that for you as well.
On-Demand manufacturers usually have an API that integrates with your ecommerce store to ensure that as soon as a customer places an order it is prioritized for production. Once the product is made, it's picked, packed, and shipped from the same facility.
When Does On-Demand Manufacturing Work Best?
Many retailers have a core (or basic) collection that is available all year long—AKA your "bread and butter." Seasonal or capsule collections are developed and dropped in to refresh a brand’s offering and increase sales revenue. This is where On-Demand can play an integral role in your supply chain.
Seasonal collections—particularly for apparel and accessories brands—capture the trend of the moment and are not as long-lived as essential pieces a brand offers year round. Sometimes seasonal collections can also be a total dud, which can result in markdowns, waste, and brand dilution.
An article in The Business of Fashion states, "Traditionally, retailers prefer to hold off on markdowns until later in the year, as discounting too early and too deeply can shrink already squeezed profit margins. Sometimes, it can also cheapen the perception around a brand or retailer."
Designing and manufacturing seasonal collections On-Demand allows brands to test a product before they buy into it. They only need to make a few units to test the market, try selling In-Store, or create samples to photograph for their ecommerce store.
If there’s a spike in sales for a specific style, the brand can decide, based on demand, if they'd like to produce more and absorb the units into their inventory. Or, they can play it safe and continue to produce customer orders On-Demand.
The On-Demand manufacturing model can dramatically reduce the risk of overproducing and underselling—making it possible for small businesses, entrepreneurs, and makers to create and test new products with less upfront financial commitment and risk.
Moving Forward With On-Demand Manufacturing
Now that you understand the On-Demand manufacturing model, you can make a more informed choice on whether it makes sense for your business.
If you’re evaluating partners, ask for clear lead-time SLAs, quality control steps, and integration details (order routing, tracking, and returns). Then start with a small set of SKUs to validate unit economics and customer experience before expanding.
Read more
- Inventory Accuracy: How to Identify & Solve Discrepancies in Stock Levels
- The Complete Guide to Purchasing Product Samples
- Inventory Reporting 101: A Retailer's Guide to Reporting on Inventory
- Keeping Up With Demand: Tactics to Boost Productivity And Get Orders Out on Time
- What is Overselling (+ How to Prevent It)
- Diversify Your Offerings: Takeaways From 5 Service-Based Businesses Turned Retailers
- 8 Benefits Of Outsourcing Order Fulfillment for Your Retail Business
- The Retailer’s Guide to the Weighted Average Cost Method
On-Demand Manufacturing for Retail Operations FAQ
What is On-Demand manufacturing for retail businesses?
On-Demand manufacturing means making products only after a customer orders, instead of producing large batches upfront. It’s advantageous for small businesses because it has low minimum order requirements and can even allow making one piece at a time. This supports more sustainable inventory management and market testing.
How does On-Demand manufacturing reduce excess inventory and markdowns?
Retailers manufacture only what customers order, so they don’t get stuck with excess stock at the end of the season. That removes the need to discount stale styles, colors, or sizes, helping protect margin and avoid brand dilution. It also reduces over-production of finished goods and wasted materials.
How can retailers speed up production and shipping with On-Demand manufacturing?
On-Demand manufacturing can cut lead times from roughly six to 10 months in traditional supply chains to one to 10 days from when the customer places the order. Orders can ship within one to 10 days, depending on the facility and product. Shipping directly from the manufacturer can also mean faster delivery.
Why is On-Demand manufacturing better for cash flow than bulk ordering?
On-Demand manufacturing keeps money out of inventory, freeing dollars for sales and marketing while avoiding end-of-season stock that forces markdowns. Even if per-unit cost is higher, margins are predictable per unit sold. Example: $50 retail and $25 COGS is 50% margin, versus 29% after a 30% markdown.
When does On-Demand manufacturing work best for seasonal product launches?
It works best for seasonal or capsule collections that are trend-driven and not as long-lived as year-round core items. Brands can make a few units to test the market, try selling In-Store, or create samples for ecommerce photos. If sales spike, they can produce more or keep fulfilling orders On-Demand.






