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When starting, Spin Master's founder chose to replicate a product rather than license it. He argued that depending on a licensor was riskier than controlling his own manufacturing and destiny, even though it seemed harder upfront. This challenges the conventional wisdom of de-risking through partnerships.

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The conventional wisdom for CPG startups was to be "asset-light" and use co-packers. However, owning the supply chain provides crucial control over quality, production schedules, and cash flow, preventing startups from being pushed aside by a co-packer's larger clients. This control is now a key diligence point.

Instead of starting in a kitchen, CPG entrepreneur Emma Hernan bought a manufacturing facility first. This generated revenue by co-packing for other brands, secured her own supply chain, and created multiple income streams from a single asset before her product even launched.

When leading beverage manufacturers refused to produce their unique, raw-ingredient recipe, the founders built their own bespoke manufacturing facility. This vertical integration was necessary to maintain product quality and bring their vision to market, despite the challenge of building two businesses at once.

Unlike D2C competitors who are primarily marketers that outsource production, Spot & Tango vertically integrated by building its own factory. This contrarian move created a strong competitive moat through proprietary processes, quality control, and supply chain ownership.

After proving a new manufacturing platform with one profitable industrial facility, the fastest path to market-wide adoption is licensing the technology to established players. This trades maximum per-unit profit for speed and scale, leveraging partners' existing infrastructure.

A key competitive advantage for cocktail brand Buzz Balls was owning its supply chain. The founder brought the production of both the patented spherical plastic containers and the spirits in-house. This strategic move ensured quality and reliability, a challenge where most D2C founders fail by remaining dependent on co-packers.

Companies, especially in early stages, should resist outsourcing production too quickly. Keeping a new process in-house is essential for understanding its pain points, which is a prerequisite for being able to specify clear, effective requirements to an external vendor later on.

Paranoid about quality control with their first Alibaba supplier, Unbound Merino's founders flew to the factory for the initial production run. This seemingly inefficient act of being physically present built a strong personal relationship that became their primary safeguard for quality.

Founders in CPG should personally master the hands-on production of their product before outsourcing. This deep knowledge of the process is invaluable, equipping you to ask specific technical questions and properly evaluate a co-manufacturer's capabilities, ensuring quality is maintained at scale.

After a partner changed a product's formula and wiped out his sales, Daniel Lubetzky learned a vital lesson. For KIND, he insisted on owning the recipes and controlling the manufacturing process to ensure brand consistency and prevent external decisions from destroying his business.

Controlling Production Can Be Less Risky Than Licensing for Physical Products | RiffOn