Launching a private label handbag brand sounds simpler than it is. The classic mistakes — wrong MOQ, weak branding, photography that kills conversion — sink most first-year attempts. This is a 90-day plan that has worked for the brands we've supplied in recent years.

Day 1-15: Market positioning and product definition

Before talking to any factory, lock down:

  • Target retail price. $30 retail, $80 retail, and $200 retail are different businesses. Pick one.
  • Target customer. Specific demographic — "women 28-42, urban professional, US/UK markets" not "women who like nice bags."
  • 3-5 core SKUs to launch with. Resist 15 SKUs at launch. Validate small first.
  • Brand aesthetic direction. 1-2 pages of mood board, reference brands you admire (and why), color palette, hardware preference.
  • Selling channel. Shopify D2C, Amazon FBA, Etsy, wholesale, or hybrid. Each has very different requirements.

Realistic budget for first 100-300 bag launch

Line itemLeanRealisticComfortable
Samples (3 SKUs)$450$600$1,500
First production (150 pcs, 3 SKUs)$1,500$3,000$6,000
Shipping + duty to your country$800$1,500$3,500
Branding kit (logo, label, hangtag)$200$800$3,000
Packaging (polybag, dust bag, box)$300$800$2,000
Product photography (lifestyle + flat)$400$1,200$3,500
Shopify / Amazon setup$200$500$2,000
Initial ad budget (testing)$500$2,000$8,000
Total$4,350$10,400$29,500

Day 15-45: Supplier sourcing and sample evaluation

Step-by-step:

  1. Day 15-20: Identify 5-8 candidate factories (Alibaba Verified Supplier + 5+ years).
  2. Day 20-25: Initial inquiry with detailed spec — ask for FOB quote, MOQ, lead time on YOUR SKUs.
  3. Day 25-30: Shortlist 2-3 factories. Order samples from all of them ($100-$200 per sample).
  4. Day 30-40: Samples arrive. Inspect physically. Compare side-by-side. Photograph each.
  5. Day 40-45: Pick winning factory. Negotiate final price and terms. Place PO.

The biggest first-launch mistake is rushing past sample evaluation. Spend the $300-$600 on multi-factory samples — it tells you more than any reference checking.

Day 30-50: Branding and packaging (run parallel with sampling)

Branding kit minimum viable:

  • Logo. If budget tight, Fiverr / 99designs $50-$300. Avoid clip-art and AI generators.
  • Interior label. Woven Damask label is the premium move ($0.50 per bag). Printed is acceptable for budget launches.
  • Hangtag. Cardboard or leather, your logo + price + style. $0.20-$0.50 per piece.
  • Dust bag. Cotton drawstring, your logo printed/embroidered. $1-$2 per bag.
  • Polybag. Branded or plain. $0.05-$0.15 per bag.
  • Care card. Single-card or folded leaflet, brand story + care instructions. $0.10-$0.30 per bag.

For Shopify D2C, also need:

  • Outer shipping box (branded) — $0.50-$2.00 per shipment
  • Tissue paper or wrapping — $0.10-$0.30 per shipment
  • Thank-you note — handwritten or printed, $0.05-$0.20 per shipment

Day 45-75: Production and quality control

Once PO is placed:

  • Bulk production: 25-45 days for 100-300 piece OEM run.
  • Mid-production check (DUPRO): worth doing for first run ($150-$300).
  • Pre-shipment final inspection (FRI): mandatory for first run.
  • Photograph the QC report — useful for marketing and trust-building.

Day 60-85: Brand assets and photography (run parallel)

You'll receive sample-quality bags by Day 50-60. Use these for early photography:

  • Flat product shots: White background, all angles. DIY with iPhone + softbox + white sweep is acceptable.
  • Lifestyle shots: Model wearing the bag, in-context. Hire a photographer + 1-2 models. Budget $500-$2,000 for a half-day shoot.
  • Detail shots: Hardware, lining, stitching. Macro detail tells quality story.
  • Size reference: Bag worn by 5'4" and 5'9" models, with measurements overlay. Critical for online sales.

For Amazon FBA, you'll need at least 7-9 images per SKU at 2000×2000 minimum. For Shopify D2C, 12-20 lifestyle shots create the brand vibe.

Day 75-90: Launch infrastructure

Two days before bulk arrives:

  • Storefront live (Shopify, Amazon listing approved, Etsy shop)
  • Inventory plan: warehouse arrangements, packing materials, return process
  • Customer service plan: email autoresponder, WhatsApp/chat for sales questions, return policy
  • Initial marketing push: pre-launch email list, soft-launch to friends/family for first reviews

Day 90+: Launch and feedback loop

Launch the brand. Set a 30-day measurement window. Track:

  • Sell-through rate by SKU (which sells, which doesn't)
  • Return rate by SKU and reason (sizing, quality, color mismatch)
  • Customer reviews (especially first 20)
  • Marketing channel performance (which ad set / Etsy keyword / Amazon PPC works)

By Day 120, you should have enough data to place second order — typically 2-3x the first order on proven SKUs.

The most common first-launch failures

  1. Too many SKUs at launch. 10+ SKUs with 50 pcs each = no SKU has enough inventory to be findable.
  2. Underbudgeting marketing. Product cost is 30-40% of launch budget; marketing/photography should be 30-40% too.
  3. Skipping sample evaluation. Saved $200, lost $3,000 on a misjudged factory.
  4. Weak photography. Even a great bag converts at 1% with bad photography.
  5. No return policy clarity. Hidden cost surprise — international returns cost $15-$40 per bag, you absorb.