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How Merch Brokers Should Work with Printers

How Merch Brokers Should Work with Printers

brownink00@gmail.com
brownink00@gmail.com
April 3, 2026 April 3, 2026 Bulk Printing

In the custom apparel industry, merch brokers play a critical role. They are the bridge between clients (brands, schools, companies) and production partners (printers). The success of any merch project depends heavily on how well brokers manage this relationship.

Working with printers is not just about placing orders. It involves communication, planning, technical understanding, and managing expectations on both sides. When done right, it leads to smooth production, better margins, and long-term partnerships. When done poorly, it results in delays, reprints, and unhappy clients.

This guide explains how merch brokers should work with printers to deliver consistent, high-quality results.


Understand the Apparel Printing Process

Before managing printer relationships, merch brokers must understand how apparel printing actually works.

Custom apparel printing involves applying designs onto garments using methods like screen printing, DTG, sublimation, or heat transfer. Each method has different requirements, costs, and timelines depending on order size and design complexity.

For example, screen printing is ideal for bulk orders, while DTG works better for smaller runs and detailed designs.

If a broker does not understand these differences, they cannot guide clients properly or choose the right production method.


Start With Clear, Complete Information (Avoid Costly Delays)

One of the biggest mistakes merch brokers make is sending incomplete information to printers.

Printers need specific details to provide accurate quotes and timelines. This typically includes:

  • Final artwork (vector files preferred)
  • Garment type, color, and sizes
  • Print placement (front, back, sleeves)
  • Quantity breakdown
  • Required delivery timeline

Incomplete information leads to pricing changes, delays, and production errors. In fact, printers often revise quotes when details are missing, which creates friction in the workflow.


Align Client Expectations With Printer Capabilities

Merch brokers often sit between client expectations and production realities. This is where most problems occur.

Clients may request:

  • Very low quantities at bulk pricing
  • Complex designs with tight deadlines
  • Specialty finishes without understanding limitations

Your role is to translate what’s possible.

For example, certain printing methods require setup time and are not suitable for small orders, while others may not support complex artwork or certain fabrics.

Setting realistic expectations early prevents conflicts later.


MOQ (Minimum Order Quantity) and Pricing Structure

MOQ is one of the most important factors when working with printers.

Most printers require a minimum order quantity because small runs are not cost-efficient. Screen printing, for example, often requires setup costs that make small orders expensive, while digital methods allow lower MOQs.

As a merch broker, you should:

  • Know each printer’s MOQ
  • Understand how MOQ applies (per design, color, or total order)
  • Use MOQ strategically when quoting clients

This helps you avoid underpricing and ensures your margins are protected.


Choose the Right Printing Method With the Printer

Many brokers try to decide the printing method themselves but the best results come from collaboration. Printers understand their machines, limitations, and workflows better than anyone.

Working together helps you choose the most efficient method based on:

  • Design complexity
  • Fabric type
  • Quantity
  • Budget

Choosing the wrong method can increase costs, reduce quality, or delay production.


Apparel Printing Process

Build Long-Term Relationships With Reliable Printers

The best merch brokers don’t work with random printers for every order. They build long-term partnerships.

A reliable printer understands your:

  • Quality expectations
  • Communication style
  • Client requirements
  • Order patterns

Over time, this leads to:

  • Faster turnaround
  • Better pricing
  • Priority handling (especially for rush orders)

Consistency in production partners leads to consistency in results.


Communicate Like a Project Manager, Not Just a Middleman

Merch brokers are essentially production managers.

This means managing communication across both sides:

  • Keeping clients updated
  • Following up with printers
  • Confirming approvals
  • Tracking production timelines

Miscommunication is one of the biggest causes of delays in apparel production.

Good brokers reduce friction by being proactive, not reactive.


Always Approve Samples or Proofs Before Production

One of the most expensive mistakes in merch production is skipping approvals.

Before bulk production, always confirm:

  • Digital mockups
  • Print placement
  • Color accuracy
  • Garment quality

Some printing methods may slightly alter colors or design appearance depending on fabric and technique.

Skipping this step can lead to full reprints and financial loss.


Plan for Lead Times and Production Bottlenecks

Production timelines include:

  • Artwork preparation
  • Sampling
  • Production
  • Quality checks
  • Shipping

Small batch orders may take around 5–10 days, while bulk orders can take significantly longer depending on complexity and volume.

Merch brokers should always build buffer time into their planning, especially for events or deadlines.


Handle Problems Professionally

Even with the best planning, issues can arise:

  • Print defects
  • Delays
  • Inventory shortages
  • Miscommunication

The difference between a good and great merch broker is how they handle these situations. Instead of blaming printers or clients, focus on:

  • Finding solutions
  • Communicating clearly
  • Maintaining relationships

Strong problem-solving builds trust on both sides.


Think Beyond One Order

As your clients grow, their needs change:

  • Larger orders
  • More complex designs
  • Faster turnaround
  • Better consistency

Working with scalable printers ensures you can grow with your clients instead of constantly switching suppliers.


Final Thoughts

Working with printers is about building a system that consistently delivers results.

The best merch brokers understand printing processes, communicate clearly, manage expectations, and build long-term relationships with reliable partners.

When this relationship is strong, everything else becomes easier, pricing, timelines, quality, and client satisfaction.


Work Smarter With MLXL Pro

If you’re a merch broker looking for a reliable production partner, MLXL Pro helps you simplify the entire process. From selecting the right printing methods to managing MOQ, timelines, and bulk production, we work as an extension of your team.

Partner with MLXL Pro to deliver consistent, high-quality apparel for your clients without the stress of managing production alone.

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