The Trouble With Scaling for 'Hand-Crafted' BIZ Experiencess The last thing an BIZ Experiences ever wants to say is 'I'm sorry we can't take that order for 10,000 units, because we can't make it all in time.'

By Adina Grigore Edited by Dan Bova

Opinions expressed by BIZ Experiences contributors are their own.

Shutterstock

Over the past five years, my all-natural skincare company, S.W. Basics has been trying to figure out how to scale. We've made a lot of progress, in a lot of ways. We've added employees, sales brokers, a fulfillment center and recently outside manufacturing. (Yes, up until now, we have been making all of our products by hand.) And in our experience, hand-crafting products seems to be the enemy to scaling. I can't think of a faster way to depressing BIZ Experiencesship than saying, "I'm sorry we can't take that order for 10,000 units, because we can't make it all in time."

Related: Protect Your Most Valuable Business Assets

Moving to outside manufacturing has been significantly more difficult that we were imagining. Apparently, it's actually fairly rare that a company switches over. Either you hand make from day one until forever or you contact third-party manufacturers before launching your company in the first place. My cold calls have been met with some serious confusion and disbelief. "Wait, you want to use your formulas?" "Are you a chemist?" "Who is making the products now? Not you, right?"

Related: To Be Successful, Do Only What Matters

It's been incredibly daunting. I have spoken to dozens of facilities. A couple have taken us on but only for some of our products (the ones that are easiest and fastest to produce). And they've got a whole lot of attitude about it. Worried but not one to give up, I have kept trying with new places. And finally, after more than four years of searching, we have found two facilities that are perfect -- dreamboat perfect. They are doing exactly what we need: producing the entire line for us with our exact formulas in the quantities we need as quickly as we need them. In fact, they are doing more than that. They are also helping us to certify the entire collection organic (something that other facilities have rejected from the get go because "organic is a trend that is going away"), and they are working on our formulas to make them better and better. But better according to my standards, not theirs. It's amazing.

When this past week we received our first ever delivery of 5,000 units of our cream, the best-selling product in our line and the hardest to produce, it was one of the most satisfying moments I've ever had as an BIZ Experiences. Just seeing all that product -- my product but not made by me -- gave me pure joy. It's successes like this that I think really matter when you're building your business: overcoming rejection, ignoring naysayers, being patient and having just the perfect amount of audacity -- that makes you keep trying until you get what you want. These moments are rare in business, but they really make the whole thing worth it.

Related: Why Corporate Businesses Should Adopt a Startup Mentality

Adina Grigore

founder of S.W. Basics

Adina Grigore is the founder of S.W. Basics, a Brooklyn-based natural products company that makes an all-natural and sustainable skincare line. The idea for S.W. Basics came to her after she finished her education in holistic nutrition in 2007 and founded a grassroots health information company at the age of 23. Today, she’s never been so happy to have been blessed with sensitive skin -- and a zeal for BIZ Experiencesship.

Want to be an BIZ Experiences Leadership Network contributor? Apply now to join.

Business News

How Much Does Apple Pay Its Employees? Here Are the Exact Salaries of Staff Jobs, Including Developers, Engineers, and Consultants.

New federal filings submitted by Apple reveal how much the tech giant pays its employees for a variety of roles.

Growing a Business

Forget Investors and Co-Founders — Here's How I Built a Lean, Scalable Business on My Terms

You don't need a partner or investors to build something that lasts. You need vision, systems and the guts to go all in on yourself. Here's how I built alone — and why I still would, even now.

Side Hustle

This 26-Year-Old's Side Hustle Turned Full-Time Business Led to $100,000 in 2.5 Months and Is On Track for $2.5 Million in 2025

Ross Friedman's successful venture started with a "Teen Night" in Boston, Massachusetts.

Business Ideas

70 Small Business Ideas to Start in 2025

We put together a list of the best, most profitable small business ideas for BIZ Experiencess to pursue in 2025.

Buying / Investing in Business

Meet the Person Who Invented Plastic that Dissolves in Water

"Big Plastic" might hate it, but it's an opportunity for investors in the $1.3T plastics industry.