Why Timing Matters More Than Style Selection
Many boutique owners spend more energy on which styles to buy and overlook the fact that order timing has a bigger impact on margin.
Cashmere has a longer production and shipping cycle than basic knitwear. And boutique selling windows are shorter than fast fashion’s. Get the timing wrong, and you’re choosing between stockouts and overstock.
The Boutique Cashmere Buying Calendar (Northern Hemisphere)
| Timeline | Buyer Action | Why It Matters |
|---|---|---|
| Mar–May | Finalize color cards, silhouettes, initial budget | Suppliers begin AW production planning |
| Jun–Aug | Place first order (pre-order or ready-to-ship) | Ensure in-store availability by early September |
| Sep–Oct | First delivery arrives, merchandising, observe sell-through | Adjust reorder plan based on real sales |
| Nov–Dec | Peak reorder period | Protect best-sellers from stocking out during holiday season |
| Jan–Feb | Markdowns + plan next season | Evaluate turnover, prepare for SS |
Two Timing Points Explained
Why Place the First Order by June–August?
Cashmere wholesale isn’t a “place order, ship tomorrow” category. Even with ready-to-ship inventory, procurement, QC, and logistics take time.
If your target is September 1 in-store date, you should finalize orders by July at the latest.
Why Is Nov–Dec Reorder Timing Critical?
Holiday sales concentrate into a 6–8 week window. If your best-seller stocks out during this period, you’re not losing “a day of sales”—you’re capping your entire season’s profit.
This is where ready-to-ship suppliers create outsized value: reorder cycles shrink from 8–12 weeks to 2–3 weeks.
Timing by Sourcing Model
| Model | When to Order | Delivery Window | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|
| Pre-order (custom development) | Mar–May | Aug–Oct | Buyers with design input, differentiation goals |
| Ready-to-ship (stock) | Jun–Aug (first order) / anytime (reorder) | 2–4 weeks | Buyers prioritizing lower risk, faster reaction |
| Mixed (stock + reorder) | Jun stock order + in-season reorder | Flexible | The pragmatic default for most boutiques |
A Common Timing Mistake
“I’ll wait and see sales data before deciding” — for cashmere, this usually means missing the window.
If you rely entirely on in-season sales data to place your first order, supplier capacity is already allocated. You’re left with later delivery dates or higher rush-order costs.
A more robust approach: Use previous year’s SKU-level sales data to guide your order, not current-season data.
Buying Calendar: Action Checklist
- Before March: Review last year’s AW cashmere sales by SKU
- Apr–May: Confirm AW color cards and ready-to-ship lists with suppliers
- June: Place first order; prioritize neutral colors in proven best-sellers
- September: Track sell-through speed within 2 weeks of display
- October: Launch first reorder wave; protect cardigans and basics
- Before December: Confirm holiday inventory levels; use ready-to-ship for gap-filling
FAQ
Q: What’s the latest a boutique can place its first AW cashmere order?
A: August is the practical cutoff. After that, hitting a September in-store date becomes difficult.
Q: How does ready-to-ship timing differ from pre-order?
A: Pre-orders require Mar–May ordering for Aug–Oct delivery. Ready-to-ship allows Jun–Aug ordering with 2–4 week delivery, and much faster reorders.
Q: Can I push timing later if I only buy small test batches?
A: Later timing is possible, but selection shrinks. Most supplier capacity is locked by larger buyers in Jun–Aug; small-batch buyers rely more on ready-to-ship availability.
This guide is prepared by the Cawoolyang team for boutique buyers and wholesale decision-makers. For our current ready-to-ship delivery timeline, contact us for the latest stock sheet.