Introduction
Meta description: Step-by-step ODM and custom press-on nails planning checklist for beauty brands and salons preparing an OEM/ODM project. Custom and ODM projects let you create signature styles, unique packaging, and brand exclusivity when done with the right preparation.
Why choose custom or ODM for press-on nails?
Custom and ODM options help beauty brands and salons differentiate with exclusive designs, proprietary packaging, or unique material blends. They can support higher price points and brand recognition.
Practical buyer sections
1. Clarify project scope
- Custom design only: you provide full artwork and specs; manufacturer executes production.
- ODM: supplier contributes design and engineering based on your brief, often faster and lower cost for development.
- OEM: supplier makes products exactly to your provided specs under your brand.
2. Design and functional requirements
- Decide shapes, sizes, finishes (matte, glossy), and embellishments (3D, crystals, dried flowers).
- Specify reusable claims, adhesive type compatibility, and recommended wear instructions for customers.
- Consider packaging insert copies and care cards for retail or ecommerce.
3. Sampling and validation
- Request initial concept samples (digital mockups > physical prototypes).
- Test fit across your top 10 customer nail shapes and sizes.
- Check finish durability under basic wear tests (light daily activities, one-week wear test).
- Get packaging mockups and fit checks for retail shelves and shipping boxes.
Supplier evaluation guidance for custom/ODM
- Design capability: review supplier portfolios for similar styles (e.g., dried flower, tortoiseshell, cat-eye).
- Sample turnaround: confirm prototype timelines and revision rounds.
- Tooling and process: ask if the supplier needs new molds or printing plates and potential setup costs.
- Intellectual property: agree on ownership of custom artwork and exclusivity clauses before development begins.
- Quality assurance: request inspection checklists and acceptable defect rates for production batches.
Preparation checklist before placing an ODM order
- Document a design brief: shapes, finishes, target retail price, and packaging style.
- Compile a sizing matrix and expected SKU counts per style.
- Budget for prototype rounds and possible tooling fees.
- Prepare a launch plan: photography, listing copy, and social content timed to sample approval.
- Confirm minimum order quantities, lead time windows, and payment terms in writing.
Common risks and mitigation
- Scope creep: lock in the number of revision rounds and change request fees.
- IP disputes: include IP and exclusivity terms in the contract.
- Unclear specs: use engineering drawings, photos, and prototypes to avoid misunderstandings.
- Production delays: build buffer time into your launch calendar and prioritize faster shipping options for initial stock.
Conclusion
Custom and ODM press-on projects require clear briefs, sample validation, and contractual safeguards. When planned correctly, they unlock premium margins and brand recognition. For guidance on working with our customization options, see /pages/customization.

