Wholesale page
This page is meant to work alongside the trade inquiry, quote readiness, and customer follow-up pipeline you already have. It explains MOQ, workflow, expectations, and why buyers can trust the process before your team ever replies.
Buyer value
Page job
Quote readiness before outreach
Use this page to help trade buyers prepare quantity, packaging, timing, and shipping expectations before the first conversation.
Buyer education is visible before a prospect reaches out for a quote.
MOQ, sample, lead-time, and export expectations are easier to understand up front.
The page bridges shopper interest into inquiry, quotation, and customer follow-up.
MOQ lane
100 units
A practical starting point for retail, gifting, and distribution.
Lead time
12-20 days
Typical production timing for custom resin micro-batches.
Quote path
Prepared
Inquiry and follow-up details are organized before a buyer commits.
Intent proof
The content path is clearer when each page owns one buyer question, one supporting action, and one reason to continue beyond a general product browse.
Primary buyer intent
Quote-ready trade prep
This page helps trade buyers shape quantity, packaging, sample, timing, and shipping expectations before asking for pricing.
Secondary action
Prepare the first brief
The strongest next step is to gather buyer role, target quantity, packaging needs, and timeline before a quote conversation.
Page separation
Different from retail browsing
The storefront is for product discovery; this page carries trade terms, sample context, and quote-readiness detail.
Buyer confidence checkpoint
Each content page carries a clear decision checkpoint so shoppers can move from reading to action with proof, expectations, and the right next step in view.
Quantity fit
MOQ and product lane are clear before outreach
A trade buyer can decide whether the current catalog fits retail, gifting, distribution, or custom packaging needs.
Sample approval
Packaging and finish questions are surfaced early
Sample timing, card sleeve expectations, and finish review are named before pricing becomes the only topic.
Reply readiness
The first message can become a stronger quote brief
Quantity, market, shipping terms, and timing details are easier to prepare before a formal quote conversation.
Decision bridge
Each bridge keeps the reader moving from proof and expectations into a clear shopping, support, or quote-prep path.
Trade-ready products
Compare drops with wholesale context
Start with products that already surface packaging, display, stock, and sample-readiness signals.
Compare trade dropsQuote prep path
Prepare the brief before pricing
Quantity, market, packaging, timeline, and shipping terms make the first quote conversation faster.
Review brief starterSample checkout path
Use checkout for a small proof order
A sample cart can validate finish, packing, and tracking before a larger trade quote moves forward.
Start sample orderLead time
12-20 days
Typical micro-batch production for custom resin drops.
MOQ lane
100 units
B2B quote flow prepared for distributors, gifting, and retail launches.
Finish pass
3-step polish
Mold, hand-finish, and glow-check before final pack-out.
01
Brief and material direction
Define the drop look, hardware, finish, packaging direction, and whether it is D2C, gifting, or wholesale-led.
02
Sample and pricing confirmation
Confirm MOQ, sample timing, EXW/FOB options, revisions, and cost structure before production slotting.
03
Micro-batch production
Cast, cure, polish, inspect, and prepare either direct consumer fulfillment or trade shipment routing.
04
Post-purchase and reorder
Track delivery, collect repeat-buyer signals, and move trade conversations into reorder or expansion workflows.
Wholesale readiness
Wholesale buyers can review MOQ, sample timing, packaging expectations, and follow-up details before they contact the team, which makes the first conversation more specific and easier to price.
Wholesale quote readiness checklist
This keeps wholesale outreach practical: buyer fit, sample approval, packaging, shipping terms, and payment assumptions are visible before the quote conversation starts.
Buyer fit
Quantity, market, and product lane are named
A stronger first brief includes target channel, estimated units, product interest, and whether the order is retail, gifting, or distribution.
Sample and packaging
Approval details are ready before pricing
Sample timing, finish expectations, card sleeve needs, and packaging notes help keep quote revisions focused.
Terms before quote
Shipping and payment assumptions are clear
EXW or FOB preference, target ship window, and deposit expectations should be reviewed before a formal quote is accepted.
Wholesale sample kit
Trade buyers can treat a small checkout order as a practical sample kit: display fit, gift feel, and reorder potential stay visible before MOQ decisions.
Shelf test
Check display fit before bulk units
Use a small sample order to compare card sleeve, counter display, barcode label, and shelf story before a wider retail buy.
Gift test
Validate unboxing and packaging feel
Confirm whether the finish, sleeve, and care notes feel gift-ready enough for launch kits, creator bundles, or loyalty rewards.
Repeat test
Decide what should become a reorder lane
Track which SKU, color story, and packaging format deserves a larger quote once sample feedback is clear.
Wholesale brief starter
A clear first note helps the team review fit, sample needs, packaging, timing, and shipping terms before the price conversation starts.
Send this brief before quote follow-up so the next reply can focus on pricing, samples, and approval.
Buyer role
Name the channel and market
Say whether the request is retail resale, gifting, distribution, or a brand collaboration, plus the target country or sales channel.
Target quantity
Give the first unit range
Share expected units, preferred products, and whether the order needs ready-to-ship pieces, custom colors, or a sample approval step.
Packaging needs
Describe the presentation
Mention card sleeves, gift boxes, barcode labels, display needs, or insert requirements before pricing is prepared.
Timeline and shipping terms
Set the decision window
Include desired delivery timing, EXW or FOB preference, destination region, and any payment-term expectation before quote follow-up.
Quote reply path
The reply path keeps sample questions, commercial terms, and the next decision point clear before a trade order moves forward.
Sample reply
Finish and packaging questions get answered first
The first reply should confirm sample needs, finish expectations, packaging notes, and whether a proof order is useful before a larger quote.
Term window
Commercial assumptions are kept visible
MOQ, destination region, EXW or FOB preference, payment split, and target delivery window stay together so pricing does not drift.
Next action
Quote follow-up has a clear decision point
The buyer should know whether the next step is sample approval, revised quantity, final quote confirmation, or production planning.
Quote follow-up proof
This keeps the public promise aligned with quote readiness, customer follow-up, and the trade details a buyer can prepare before pricing decisions.
Trade inquiry
Brief enters the wholesale queue
Quantity, market, packaging, timing, and product interest become a clean brief for quote follow-up.
Quote readiness
Pricing moves into quote readiness
MOQ, sample timing, EXW/FOB assumptions, and line-item pricing are prepared before the buyer gets a formal reply.
customer follow-up
Next action stays visible after outreach
Follow-up timing, priority, and quote decisions stay connected to the buyer context instead of living only in email.
Resin-safe packaging
Each order is cushioned for gloss protection, scratch prevention, and transit stability.
Small-batch QA
Drops are checked for edge polish, hardware fit, and pigment consistency before dispatch.
Wholesale-ready quoting
MOQ, EXW/FOB, sample timing, and payment expectations are prepared before a buyer starts a trade conversation.
Page action summary
This summary keeps the page from becoming a dead end by showing the best shopping, support, or proof path after the buyer has finished reading.
Compare products
Start with drops that already show packaging, display, stock, and sample-readiness signals.
Prepare brief
Gather buyer role, target quantity, packaging needs, timeline, and shipping terms before outreach.
Validate sample
Use a small checkout order when finish, packing, and delivery proof should be seen before a quote.
Ready for the next step
Review MOQ, sample timing, and production terms, then copy a tighter wholesale brief from the storefront quote starter.