Can the line support launch volume and reorder timing?
Capacity should be discussed against campaign dates, distributor forecasts, pack availability, and expected reorder rhythm.
SeaRey manufacturing is organized around the business problems buyers face after the first sample is approved: repeatability, packaging readiness, lead-time control, and reorder planning.

Supplier records and intake checks help protect formula continuity across repeated batches.
Mixing and process notes support consistent viscosity, texture, and sensory performance.
Filling control matters for buyer complaints, shelf appearance, landed cost, and channel acceptance.
Bottle, pump, cap, carton, and label coordination starts early because pack issues can delay launches more than formula work.
Finished goods checks reduce surprises before goods move into distributor, salon, or retail inventory.
The first order proves a product can launch. The second and third orders prove whether the factory can protect the buyer's reputation.
Good manufacturing conversations happen before artwork is finalized and before launch dates are promised to distributors.
Capacity should be discussed against campaign dates, distributor forecasts, pack availability, and expected reorder rhythm.
Pumps, bottle necks, viscosity, label material, and carton structure should be checked before large packaging commitments.
A strong factory gives buyers practical status updates on samples, materials, packaging, production windows, and inspection findings.