Three Cheers for the Red, White and Blue
How to make the most of selling products made in the U.S.
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Bronson, who has been a distributor for a decade, added that using items made in the U.S. makes sense from an economic standpoint. "Domestic manufacturing is beginning to make sense economically in a number of areas," he noted. "In particular, small-batch customization allows buyers to save on overhead, such as sampling, tech packs, sourcing, prepayments and lead times, that can dwarf the unit costs of importing fewer than a thousand units."
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Brendan Menapace is the content director for Promo+Promo Marketing.
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