Running a fashion brand sounds creative and excitingâand it isâbut behind every perfect launch is a whole lot of logistics and fabric cuttings. Production timelines. Supplier follow-ups. Sampling updates. Fabric minimums. Payment schedules. And if youâre managing all of that from a million spreadsheets and flagged emails it gets messy really fast.
Systems have completely changed the way I manage the back end of fashion brandsâboth my own and my clientsâ. Itâs the system I turn to when I need to get out of reaction mode and back into clarity. It doesnât just make things look organizedâit helps you actually move. Lately Iâve been diving into Notion more and more, itâs become my one stop shop for all things organization.
Hereâs how I use it:
â A development checklist I use every single time
Thereâs nothing worse than realizing too late that you forgot to spec out a detail or didnât confirm trim lead times. Suppliers and factories are working to keep your requested ship dates, help them by keeping your details straight. I built a reusable checklist for style development in Notion that keeps things tightâeven when multiple styles are in motion. (It also helps my brain chill when everything feels âopen.â Or when Iâm not on my computer, I can still pull up the Notion app)
â One location for sampling, quotes, and factory communication
Every sample round, every quote, every follow-up email with a supplierâI drop it into one page per style. That way Iâm not digging through Outlook trying to remember who said what, or even what email account the chain is under. I track MOQ updates and which suppliers & factories sent swatches, so I can compare everything side-by-side.
- My bonus here is keeping a digital library of swatches Iâve collected from meeting with suppliers and factories around the world. This digital reference saves me time while traveling.
â Production timelines that donât give me anxiety
I create a simple dashboard to track each step from proto to bulk. It lets me see exactly where we are, whatâs delayed, and whatâs coming up nextâwithout needing a project manager on payroll.
- I can link every style to its PO, factory, and sample notes so nothing gets lost.
â Why Notion > Excel when youâre scaling
I love a spreadsheet momentâbut once youâre managing multiple seasons or factories, Excel starts to feel flat. Notion lets me connect the dots across people, products, and timelines. Itâs visual, editable, and actually fun to open in the morning.
- Excel is still my guilty pleasure when creating costing sheets đ
The biggest mistake I see new brands make?
Not tracking why something worked (or didnât). Whether itâs a delayed launch or a fabric that came back different in bulk, itâs all learnable. If youâre not documenting it as you go, youâre bound to repeat it. Notion helps me (and the brands I support) build smarter each season.
- This list becomes invaluable when you bring someone new into your organization. It will save you time and money in the long run to not repeat mistakes multiple times. Your suppliers will also thank you-they remember mistakes as well as you do.
If youâre trying to run a fashion brand and feel like youâre constantly winging it on the ops sideâyouâre not alone. This part isnât always sexy, but itâs what makes the whole thing work.
Want to try the same setup I use? I made a fashion production starter dashboard in Notion thatâs easy to customize, even if youâre new to the platform. Email kerrib@oceoluxe.com or head to Oceo Luxe to grab it.
Letâs make fashion more functionalâstarting with your systems.