The Dye Sub Column
How to build a product range that sells all year round
The festive period sees huge spikes when it comes to retail but how does a business keep that trade up into the new year. Anuj Ghaghada, director at Longforte has offered his advice on how to sell well into the off-seasons.
T
he weeks leading up to Christmas are a whirlwind for anyone in the sublimation world. Printers run non-stop, mugs fly off the shelves, cushions are pressed at all hours, and the post office becomes a second home; and then January arrives.
Overnight, everything slows. The sudden quiet can feel unnerving, but a slower month doesn’t mean customers have vanished – more often, it means your product range has been geared toward one season instead of the whole year.
January is the ideal moment to step back, take stock and design a catalogue that keeps orders coming in long after festive gifting ends. Strong sublimation businesses don’t rely on Christmas alone; they succeed because they build ranges that stay relevant every month, with seasonal peaks acting as bonuses rather than lifelines.
A good starting point is to look back at your Christmas trading data. It’s full of clues about genuine demand. Some items will have sold purely because they carried Christmas designs, while others will have sold because customers simply like them at any time of year. Those evergreen sellers – the products that perform well regardless of the calendar – are the backbone of a steady product range. Mugs, drinkware, cushions, coasters, mouse pads, keyrings and practical everyday photo gifts consistently appeal to a broad audience, from offices and clubs to personalised gift buyers.
Keeping these well-stocked ensures you always have something people want, even in quieter months.
Sales aren’t just for Christmas One opportunity that many printers overlook is the January to March period for corporate and bulk buyers. This is when businesses refresh branding,
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schools plan new terms, clubs reopen, and organisations prepare for events. These customers aren’t looking for festive designs – they want branded bottles, lanyards, desk accessories, signage and welcome packs. Even smaller orders can be highly profitable when production is organised and repeat business is common once you’ve proven reliability.
Then there are the predictable consumer trends you can plan around. If you want a quick demonstration, search ‘gym membership’ on Google Trends. Every year it forms the same shape: A huge spike in the first week of January as people embrace their “new year, new me” energy, followed by a gradual slide back down as reality – and the sofa – regain their influence. But the interesting part is that the spike gets a little higher each year as wellness becomes a bigger focus.
For sublimation businesses, that’s valuable information. It marks the perfect moment to promote sports bottles, gym towels, motivational mugs, water- tracking tumblers and accessories that support new routines. And fitness is just one example. Weddings, exams, school transitions, teacher gifts, pet products, corporate conferences and hobby trends all follow seasonal rhythms. When you anticipate these peaks rather than chase them, your product range becomes far more efficient – and profitable.
Think about the bigger picture Another powerful shift is thinking in terms of collections rather than individual products. Customers rarely think in product codes; they think in solutions or themes. A co-ordinated desk set or fitness starter kit feels more considered than a single mug or water bottle. Bundles increase your average order value and streamline production because you’re printing several items for the same customer in one run. It also positions your brand as more thoughtful and premium.
Importantly, creating a robust year- round range doesn’t require huge stock investment. You can test new ideas with small quantities, limited- run designs or even digital mockups to gauge interest. Ask your repeat customers what they’d like to see next. Look at trending search terms or social media patterns. Some of your best-performing items may start life as small experiments rather than large commitments.
Stock planning is another crucial part of building a dependable range. Focus on versatile blanks that work across different audiences and occasions rather than filling shelves with highly seasonal or overly niche items. Partnering with suppliers who keep stock consistent year-round helps you avoid delays and stay dependable. A tidy, curated stockroom almost always outperforms a cluttered one.
By the time January comes around each year, many printers feel like they’re starting from zero – but with the right planning, January becomes a launchpad, not a slowdown. A profitable sublimation business isn’t built on one major peak but on thoughtful diversification, smart timing and a product range that works in every season.
The Christmas rush may be over, but your chance to build a stronger, steadier year is only just beginning.
January 2026 | 59 |
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