Multi-SKU Production Guide
Custom Plush Multi-SKU Management
Custom plush series for fan merchandise need SKU-level control of character names, color variants, expressions, attachments, packaging, barcodes and cartons.

Six control items to define for multiple SKUs
Group the shared specification while keeping every character-specific difference visible in one master table.
List the SKU code, character name, image, color and quantity.
Fix the common size, fabric, base construction and packaging.
Separate expressions, hair color, costume, embroidery and accessories.
Manage fabric, thread, character color and print references by SKU.
Match bags, backing cards, JAN/barcodes and SKU labels to the table.
Define carton quantity, case labels, destinations and release waves.
What to include in a multi-SKU control table
Use the SKU code, image, specification difference, packaging and carton label together instead of identifying items only by name.
| Control item | Information to record | Approval or match point | Common issue |
|---|---|---|---|
| SKU identity | SKU code, name, front image and color | Use the same code on artwork, sample and packaging | Example Similar name or color assigned to the wrong character |
| Shared specification | Size, fabric, base construction and common parts | Control the revision number of the shared version | Example One SKU continues with an older shared specification |
| SKU differences | Expression, embroidery, costume, hair color and accessory | Match the SKU difference column to the approved sample | Example Expression or accessory from another SKU is applied |
| Color reference | Fabric code, thread color, character color and tolerance sample | Review under agreed lighting with a physical sample | Example Color name alone leads to an unintended result |
| Packaging and barcode | Bag, backing card, JAN/barcode and SKU label | Match product, package and code as one set | Example Backing card or barcode is swapped between SKUs |
| Carton and split delivery | Carton quantity, case number, destination and release wave | Match carton contents, outer label and shipping instruction | Example Carton label or destination quantity does not match |
Original Flow: From SKU Master to Split Delivery
Separate shared and SKU-specific specifications, then carry the same code through samples, packaging and cartons.
Register codes, images and quantities
Fix series-wide requirements
Define expression, color and parts
Track revisions by SKU
Match labels, cartons and destinations
Control priorities by series type
The priority of color, accessories, release units and destinations changes with the merchandise program.
Separate member colors, expressions, costumes and attachments in the SKU table.
Place character images beside codes so similar shapes remain easy to identify.
Separate shared pattern use from fabric, embroidery-thread and print-color differences.
Reflect release wave, venue, ecommerce quantity and spare stock on carton labels.
Three SKU records that are easier to share with photos
Keep photos of the series samples, packaging labels and pre-shipment cartons alongside the control table.

Compare character, color and accessory differences side by side.

Match the product, backing card, barcode and SKU code.

Match carton contents, case number and destination label.
Materials to prepare before inquiry
Even when details are open, the SKU count, shared specification, difference list and release method help define quotation conditions.
- SKU codes and character names
- Front images and color variants
- Target quantity by SKU
- Shared size and fabric
- Expression, embroidery and costume differences
- Accessory and attachment differences
- Bag, backing card and header
- JAN/barcode and SKU label
- Packaging quantity by SKU
- Carton quantity and case number
- Quantity by destination
- Release wave and split-delivery rules
Related pages
Multi-SKU management connects to character plush series, keychains, random assortment, packaging, MOQ and quotation materials.
FAQ
When should we create the multi-SKU control table?
Create it before quotation with SKU codes, character images, shared specifications, differences and quantities. Keep updating the same table from early specification planning through samples and production.
How should shared and SKU-specific specifications be separated?
Place size, fabric and base construction in shared fields. Record only character-specific expression, hair color, costume, embroidery and accessory differences in each SKU row.
Should a color variant use a separate SKU?
Use a separate SKU when sales, barcode, packaging, inventory or delivery needs separate control. Decide whether the color difference is only internal or a distinct sales item at the planning stage.
Are multi-SKU management and random assortment the same?
No. Multi-SKU management separates design, specification, quantity and packaging by SKU. Random assortment controls the ratio or carton combination of completed SKUs.
What is needed for split delivery?
Share the destination list, quantity by SKU, carton quantity, case numbers, label fields and release or delivery sequence. Logistics conditions can change handling work and cost.
What should we provide for a quotation?
Share the SKU list, design images, target size, shared specification, SKU differences, quantities, packaging, barcode needs, target timing and destinations.
Prepare the SKU table before quotation to connect multi-character and color-variant planning to production
Share the SKU codes, images, shared specification, differences, quantities, packaging and destinations so the project-specific control items can be organized.
