Supply Chain Optimization
We design and manage supply chain operations that keep your product in stock, on budget, and ready to scale — from demand forecasting to multi-vendor coordination.
Stockouts and excess inventory are two sides of the same bad forecast.
Founders manage inventory by gut feel — order more when stock looks low, cut back when warehouse shelves are full. But hardware has long lead times, MOQ constraints, and seasonal demand patterns that make reactive management expensive.
The result is predictable: stockouts during peak season cost sales and customer trust, while excess inventory in slow months ties up capital and increases obsolescence risk. A single supplier disruption can halt your entire business.
- Forecasting based on gut feel instead of historical data and seasonality patterns
- Carrying too much safety stock, tying up capital and increasing obsolescence risk
- Relying on a single supplier, creating vulnerability to disruptions
- Negotiating annually instead of continuously optimizing total landed cost
Demand Planning & Forecasting
Data-driven demand models that account for seasonality, growth trajectories, and market variability — translating sales forecasts into precise production schedules and material orders.
Inventory Strategy
Optimal stock level architecture balancing carrying costs against stockout risk — safety stock calculations, reorder point logic, and warehouse allocation across multiple fulfillment nodes.
Multi-Vendor Coordination
Orchestration of production across multiple suppliers to reduce single-source risk, balance capacity, and maintain consistent quality — with unified scheduling and consolidated reporting.
Cost & Lead Time Reduction
Continuous analysis of total landed cost drivers, identifying opportunities for freight consolidation, material substitution, process improvements, and negotiation leverage.
Demand Forecasting
Historical sales analysis with seasonality and trend decomposition. Growth-adjusted models translate forecasts into production schedules and material orders.
Inventory & Vendor Optimization
Safety stock calculations, reorder points, and multi-warehouse allocation. Unified scheduling across suppliers with consolidated reporting.
Continuous Improvement
Monthly cost and performance reviews with actionable recommendations: freight consolidation, material substitution, and negotiation leverage.
Most founders focus on getting the first shipment right. Few plan for the tenth. Supply chain problems compound silently — a small forecasting error becomes a stockout, which becomes lost revenue, which becomes panic reorders at premium freight rates.
We build supply chain operations designed for scale from day one. That means robust demand models, diversified supplier networks, and inventory strategies that balance cost with availability. When your sales spike, your supply chain keeps up.
Common Questions
We use reference products, market analysis, and analogous product curves. As real sales data accumulates, the model self-calibrates for increasing accuracy.
Safety stock buffers against demand variability and supply uncertainty. We calculate it based on lead time, demand standard deviation, and your target service level.
At least two for critical components, with a primary/secondary split (typically 70/30). This balances efficiency against disruption risk.
Monthly. Every review includes cost analysis, performance metrics, and actionable recommendations for continuous improvement.