If you've ever sold merch in Kenya, you've probably bulk-ordered. Find a printer. Order 50 pieces. Sell them. It's the model everyone knows. But is it the best model? Let's do the honest comparison.
The Full Comparison
| Factor | Bulk Ordering | Print-on-Demand |
|---|---|---|
| Upfront cost | KES 15K–60K | KES 0 |
| Minimum order | 20–50 pieces | 1 piece |
| Inventory risk | High — unsold stock is your loss | Zero — only printed when sold |
| Size accuracy | You guess | Customer picks their own |
| Design variety | 1–2 designs per run | Unlimited |
| Per-unit cost | Lower (KES 300–600) | Higher (KES 800–1,200) |
| Checkout | WhatsApp + manual M-PESA | Automated M-PESA checkout |
| Delivery | You handle it | Platform handles it |
| Time investment | 3–4 weeks per run | 5 minutes to list, then passive |
When Bulk Ordering Still Makes Sense
Let's be fair. Bulk ordering wins in specific scenarios:
- You have guaranteed demand. A corporate order for 200 identical shirts? Bulk is cheaper per unit.
- You want screen print texture. Some creators prefer the thick, tactile feel of screen printing.
- You're selling at a physical event. Having stock at a market stall or concert merch table means instant sales.
When Print-on-Demand Wins
- You're starting out. Zero risk means you can experiment freely.
- You sell online. Social media + a store link + automated checkout. No DMs.
- You want variety. 20 different designs, each in 5 sizes? POD handles it. Bulk can't.
- You don't have capital. KES 0 to start. Period.
- You value your time. No coordination, no delivery runs, no spreadsheets.
The Real-World Scenario
Let's say you have a design you think will sell 40 units:
| Metric | Bulk (50 pcs) | POD (40 sold) |
|---|---|---|
| Upfront investment | KES 25,000 | KES 0 |
| Revenue (40 sold at KES 1,800) | KES 72,000 | KES 72,000 |
| Cost of goods | KES 25,000 (all 50) | ~KES 48,000 (40 × ~KES 1,200) |
| Delivery costs (you) | ~KES 6,000 | KES 0 (included) |
| Unsold stock (10 pcs) | -KES 5,000 | KES 0 |
| Net profit | ~KES 36,000 | ~KES 24,000 |
| Hours of work | 20–30 hours | 1–2 hours |
| Risk if it flops | Lose KES 25,000 | Lose nothing |
Bulk earns more if you sell most of your stock. POD earns less per unit but carries zero risk and takes 1/20th the time. For most Kenyan creators — especially those starting out — POD is the rational choice.
The Hybrid Approach
The smartest sellers do both. Use POD to test designs with zero risk. When a design proves itself (50+ sales), consider a bulk run for higher margins. POD for discovery, bulk for proven winners. Best of both worlds.
Start with zero risk. Build your Printisha drop world and test your first design today.
