Sourcing guide
How to Start Your Own Shoe Brand — A Private Label Footwear Guide
A practical step-by-step guide to launching a footwear brand — finding your niche, designing your first range, choosing OEM/ODM/private label, sampling, MOQ and lead times, branding, compliance and your first production run.
Launching a footwear brand is more achievable than most people think — the supply chain to make great shoes already exists. The hard part is doing the right things in the right order. Here’s a practical roadmap from idea to your first order.
Step 1 — Find your niche
The biggest mistake new brands make is being generic. The market rewards focus. Before anything else, decide:
- Category — running, sneakers, sandals, barefoot, safety, kids? Narrow is good.
- Customer — who exactly buys this, and why you?
- Position — premium, value, sustainable, performance, design-led?
- Price point — this drives every later decision (materials, construction, MOQ).
A sharp niche makes your product, marketing and sourcing decisions all easier.
Step 2 — Define the product
Turn the niche into a concrete brief: the styles, the look, the materials, the target retail price and the target landed cost. You don’t need a full tech pack yet — references, sketches and a clear description are enough to start a conversation with a manufacturer. Knowing your target price early is essential; it determines what construction and materials are realistic.
Step 3 — Choose your model: OEM, ODM or private label
This decides how much you design versus how much the factory develops:
- OEM — you provide finished designs and specs; the factory builds to them. Best if you have in-house design.
- ODM — the factory develops designs with you from a concept. Best for new brands without a design team.
- Private label — your brand (logo, labels, packaging) on the product, layered on top of OEM or ODM.
Most new brands start with ODM + private label: the manufacturer’s development team turns your idea into a production-ready shoe carrying your brand. (More detail: OEM vs ODM vs private label and our OEM/ODM services.)
Step 4 — Find the right manufacturer
Your manufacturer is your most important early partner. Look for one that:
- Genuinely specialises in your category.
- Offers development and low-MOQ sampling so you can validate before scaling.
- Is transparent on MOQ, lead time and price.
- Handles quality control and export so you’re not managing it alone.
A trading & manufacturing partner that combines its own factory with development, QC and export is often ideal for a new brand — you get factory pricing with guidance. (See our solution for startup brands.) For how to vet a supplier, read how to find a reliable shoe manufacturer in China.
Step 5 — Sample and refine
Development is where your product is really born:
- First samples in 2–4 weeks from an agreed design.
- Try them on real feet — fit is the product. Check sizing, comfort and the look.
- Revise. Expect a round or two; this is normal and worth doing properly.
- Lock materials and construction once the fit and look are right.
Don’t rush this stage to save a week — a wrong last or fit will cost you far more later.
Step 6 — Plan MOQ, cost and timing
- MOQ — around 1,000 pairs per style (300–600 per colour) for a standard run; low-MOQ on selected lines lets you start smaller.
- Cost — unit price × quantity, plus any custom tooling. Use cost optimisation (materials, construction) to hit your target price.
- Timing — work backwards from your sell date: shipping + 30–60 days production + 3–6 weeks sampling. Start 4–6 months ahead. (See the MOQ & lead time guide.)
Step 7 — Branding and compliance
- Branding — logo, woven labels, custom insole print, packaging and barcodes. This is what makes it your shoe at retail.
- Compliance — confirm the chemical and safety requirements for your market early (for the EU, REACH and restricted substances; for the US, CPSIA). Build compliant materials in from the start rather than testing failures out later.
Step 8 — Your first production run
Once samples are approved and the first order is placed:
- Production runs in 30–60 days with in-line quality control.
- A pre-shipment AQL inspection checks the batch before it leaves. (See our testing & quality standards.)
- Goods ship to your market with export documentation handled.
Then the real work begins: selling. But you’ll be selling a product that’s genuinely yours, made to a standard you can stand behind.
The bottom line
Starting a shoe brand is a process: pick a sharp niche, define the product and target price, choose ODM + private label, partner with a specialist manufacturer, sample patiently, plan MOQ and timing realistically, build in branding and compliance, then run production with proper QC. Do it in that order and a footwear brand is well within reach.
Thinking about launching? Tell us your concept — or talk to our AI Shoe Consultant — and we’ll map out the fastest realistic path to your first samples.
Frequently asked questions
How much does it cost to start a shoe brand?
The main early costs are development (samples, lasts and any custom tooling) and your first production run (MOQ × unit price). With low-MOQ sampling you can validate a design for a relatively small amount before committing to a full order. Tooling for fully custom soles is the biggest variable.
What is the minimum order to launch a footwear brand?
Plan for around 1,000 pairs per style (300–600 per colour) for a standard production run, with low-MOQ options on selected lines so a new brand can start smaller and scale once a design proves itself.
Do I need my own designs to start a brand?
No. With ODM, the manufacturer develops designs with you from a concept or reference. With OEM you supply finished designs. Most new brands start with ODM plus private-label branding.
How long from idea to launch?
Realistically 4–6 months — roughly 2–4 weeks for samples (with revision rounds), 30–60 days for production, plus shipping. Start development well ahead of your target sell date.
Sourcing footwear from China?
DOING is a footwear trading & manufacturing partner — OEM/ODM, development, QC and export. Tell us your product, market and MOQ.
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