Stackd is the operations layer between you and your product line. We find the manufacturers, handle the QC, set up the logistics, and launch the brand. You keep creating. We keep everything else running.
Minimum orders you can't afford. Spec sheets you can't read. Samples that take 8 weeks and arrive wrong.
Standard e-commerce agencies don't return your emails. Influencer agencies just want your audience for their clients.
Even if you got a product made, you can't afford to buy 500 units upfront. Dropship logistics are a maze.
We find factories that fit your product, your timeline, and your budget. No MOQ traps. No surprise surcharges. We speak manufacturer so you don't have to.
We order samples, inspect quality, and approve production runs. When something arrives wrong, we catch it before your customers do.
No warehouse required. We set up the dropship pipeline so products ship directly from manufacturer to your customer. You focus on content.
Co-branded with your aesthetic. Launch-ready on your terms. We handle the operational chaos so your first drop is clean and your second builds on it.
Plus performance bonuses on product drops. Manage 3–4 creator brands and keep every one running without holding a single unit of inventory.
We learn your audience, your aesthetic, your price point, and what you want to make. You answer 10 questions. We handle the rest.
We source 2–3 vetted manufacturers that fit your product category and run samples. You approve the sample. We approve the factory.
Sample approved. Fulfillment pipeline configured. Dropship logistics locked. Your brand is ready to launch to your audience.
Your store is live. Your drop is announced. Orders come in and ship directly to your customers. You post once. We handle everything else.
The creator economy built products for creators to use. Nobody built a product for creators who want to become a brand.
Stackd exists because the gap between "I have 50,000 followers who would buy my hoodie" and "I have a functioning apparel brand" is not a content problem. It's an operations problem. And operations is exactly what we do.