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    In Made to Measure and Made to Order, time-to-market is not an operational KPI.
    It is a competitive factor.

    When customers expect a custom garment in just a few days, every unnecessary step between measurement capture, pattern room, and cutting becomes a bottleneck. And in most cases, the issue is not production capacity, but process fragmentation.

    Drastically shortening the time from order to cutting does not mean working faster.
    It means redesigning the flow architecture.

    MTM and MTO: rising complexity, margins under pressure

    In traditional models, speed comes from volume.
    In MTM/MTO, the opposite happens: volumes decrease, variability increases.

    Each order introduces differences in:

    • measurements

    • fit

    • options

    • materials

    • production configurations

    If this complexity is handled manually, the process slows exponentially.
    If it is absorbed by the system, it becomes a competitive advantage.

    Where time is really lost

    In MTM/MTO companies, time is not lost in the major steps.
    It is lost in the invisible ones:

    • manual entry of order data

    • translation of measurements into operational instructions

    • manual pattern adjustments

    • checks between pattern making and production

    • downstream corrections

    Each micro-step adds minutes. Together, they become days.

    Shortening time-to-market means eliminating these steps, not accelerating them.

    What it really takes to go from order to cutting in minutes

    It does not require more people.
    It does not require “working harder.”
    It requires four structural conditions.

    1. A truly end-to-end integrated flow

    In MTM/MTO, the flow must be continuous:

    • measurement capture

    • order configuration

    • pattern making

    • nesting

    • cutting

    Every interruption between these steps generates:

    • manual re-entry

    • redundant checks

    • errors

    • delays

    If the order does not directly connect to pattern making and cutting, time inevitably expands.

    2. Codified rules, not manual decisions

    In many MTM processes, key decisions are still made manually:

    • how to adapt the pattern

    • which rules to apply

    • which tolerances to use

    This makes the flow:

    • slow

    • non-scalable

    • dependent on individuals

    Reducing time-to-market means turning recurring decisions into system rules.
    The pattern should not be interpreted each time—it should be generated correctly.

    3. Real automation of made-to-measure pattern making

    This is where the real difference lies.

    Many solutions stop at:

    • measurement capture

    • commercial configuration

    Then the pattern is:

    • manually adapted

    • checked

    • corrected

    And this is where time explodes.

    In fast MTM/MTO, made-to-measure pattern creation must be automatic, production-ready, with no manual intervention.

    4. Direct connection to cutting

    Even a correct pattern slows things down if it:

    • needs conversion

    • requires adjustments for nesting

    • reaches cutting with incomplete data

    Cutting should not interpret.
    It should receive coherent, validated, ready-to-use information.

    When the flow is truly complete

    Today, there is only one architecture that allows full MTM process automation without interruptions.

    Crea Solution is the only company offering a fully integrated made-to-measure system capable of managing:

    • measurement capture

    • order configuration

    • automatic generation of the made-to-measure pattern

    • nesting

    • direct transfer to cutting

    All in just 120 seconds, from order to cutting.

    When the pattern is generated automatically and the flow remains uninterrupted, time-to-market does not shrink by hours—it collapses by orders of magnitude.

    Time as a competitive asset

    Shortening time-to-market in MTM/MTO means:

    • drastically reducing indirect costs

    • increasing production capacity with the same resources

    • improving customer experience

    • reducing errors and rework

    Above all, it means turning speed into a structural asset, not an exceptional effort.

    Conclusion

    In MTM/MTO, time is not recovered by running faster.
    It is recovered by designing the process better.

    Going from measurement capture to cutting in minutes is possible only when:

    • the flow is continuous

    • rules are codified

    • pattern making is automated

    • systems are truly integrated

    Those who achieve this today are not just reducing lead times.
    They are building a scalable, robust production model ready for the future.

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