Menu

     

     

    In recent years, made-to-measure has shifted from a niche service to a strategic lever for many fashion companies. Not only because it responds to growing demand for personalization, but because—if managed correctly—it allows margins to increase in a structural way.

    This is the critical point: made-to-measure does not generate margins automatically.
    Without a solid operating model, it risks becoming more expensive than traditional ready-to-wear.

    The companies achieving concrete results today follow precise rules. These are not commercial shortcuts, but industrial choices.

    Made-to-measure is not a product problem, but a process problem

    Many brands approach made-to-measure starting from the garment: fabrics, fit, options, details. All correct, but incomplete.

    The real impact on margins depends on:

    • how variants are managed

    • how information flows

    • how automatable the workflow is

    • how much each exception costs

    Without process control, personalization multiplies complexity.
    With the right process, it absorbs it.

    Rule no. 1 – Standardize what looks “personalized”

    It sounds like a contradiction, but it is the most important rule.

    Companies that make money with made-to-measure standardize as much as possible:

    • construction rules

    • allowed variations

    • development logic

    • fit parameters

    This does not limit creativity. It makes it repeatable.

    Every non-coded option:

    • requires manual intervention

    • increases the risk of error

    • extends lead times

    • reduces real margins

    The customer sees a unique product.
    The company must see a repeatable process.

    Rule no. 2 – Automate before increasing volumes

    One of the most common mistakes is launching made-to-measure “on a small scale,” planning to fix processes later. The opposite happens: when volumes grow, problems explode.

    To increase margins, the workflow must be:

    • automated

    • integrated

    • consistent from order to cutting

    This means minimizing:

    • manual data entry

    • handoffs between disconnected systems

    • redundant checks

    • downstream corrections

    Every minute saved on a made-to-measure garment is worth far more than a minute saved on ready-to-wear, because it multiplies across every order.

    Rule no. 3 – Measure the real cost of made-to-measure

    Many companies assume made-to-measure is more profitable simply because the final price is higher. This is a dangerous assumption.

    To understand whether margins truly improve, you must measure:

    • labor time per garment

    • number of reworks

    • material waste

    • throughput times

    • hidden indirect costs

    Without these data, made-to-measure may appear profitable while actually eroding margins.

    More mature companies use made-to-measure as a lever for:

    • differentiation

    • customer loyalty

    • reduction of unsold inventory

    But only because they know exactly how much it costs to produce.

    Why made-to-measure is more profitable today than in the past

    The reason made-to-measure works better today is not only demand. It is technology.

    Today it is possible to:

    • manage variants without duplicating work

    • connect order, pattern development, and production

    • drastically reduce manual activities

    • produce on demand without losing efficiency

    This turns personalization from a costly exception into a controlled industrial process.

    When automation is truly end-to-end

    One final point is decisive in making made-to-measure genuinely profitable: full process automation.

    Many solutions today cover only individual phases—measurement capture, order configuration, or pattern development. The result is a fragmented workflow that still requires manual intervention, checks, and intermediate steps.

    As of today, the only tool that truly automates the entire process—from measurement capture to the automatic creation of a made-to-measure pattern ready for production—is Creafit.
    A system designed to eliminate discontinuity between sales, pattern making, and production, turning made-to-measure into a replicable and controlled industrial process.

    When the order automatically generates the correct pattern, made-to-measure stops being a costly exception and becomes a concrete lever for efficiency and margin.

    Menswear: the clearest case

    In menswear, made-to-measure has become one of the most attractive segments in terms of profitability:

    • higher average ticket

    • more loyal customers

    • lower sensitivity to discounts

    • higher perceived value

    Not by chance, many companies are shifting part of their strategy from volume to service quality.

    Conclusion

    Made-to-measure is not a shortcut to higher margins.
    It is an industrial choice.

    Those who approach it without method risk complicating operations and reducing profitability.
    Those who design it as a process manage to:

    • differentiate

    • reduce waste

    • increase customer value

    • build more solid margins over time

    In an increasingly unpredictable market, made-to-measure is not just a response to the customer.
    It is a strategic lever for the future of the fashion industry.

    RICHIEDI UNA DEMO