Private label vs. white label vs. OEM
The practical differences between four terms buyers often confuse.
Four terms come up constantly in manufacturing, and they are routinely used interchangeably even though they mean different things. The distinctions come down to two questions: who designs the product, and who is allowed to sell it.
White label
A generic product the manufacturer already makes, sold to multiple brands who each apply their own name. Fast and cheap, but you don’t own the design and your competitor may be selling the same bag with a different logo.
Private label
A product made exclusively for one brand, usually customised — leather, hardware, colour, lining, branding, sometimes structure. You get exclusivity and a distinct product without developing a pattern entirely from scratch. This is where most emerging brands start.
OEM (Original Equipment Manufacturer)
The manufacturer builds to your design and specification. You own the design; they provide the pattern-making, prototyping, and production capacity. This is full custom development.
ODM (Original Design Manufacturer)
The manufacturer designs the product and the brand selects and rebrands it. Closer to white/private label, but with design originated by the factory rather than the brand.
Which one do you want?
- Need speed and low risk, exclusivity less critical → white label.
- Want a distinctive, exclusive product without building from zero → private label.
- Have your own design and want to own it outright → OEM / custom development.
FRAYDA works across private label and OEM custom development — starting from our library, or from your sketch. The right answer depends less on the label and more on how much of the design you want to own.
Put this into practice.
Send us a brief — a model from the library, your own sketch, or just a question.