Choose an assortment that protects your margin

A repeatable framework for choosing what to sell on Everspring: start from your audience, anchor on 1-2 suppliers, and avoid the broad-and-shallow trap.

Written By Bas den Hoed

One of the first things every new Everspring retailer does — and one of the easiest things to get wrong — is picking what to sell. The marketplace has thousands of SKUs from many suppliers; "everything that looks good" isn't a strategy. This article gives you a framework you can apply, regardless of niche.

Start from your audience, not from the catalogue

Before you open the marketplace, write down two things:

  • Who is your customer? Be specific. "Plant lovers" is too broad. "Apartment renters in their 20s and 30s who want low-maintenance greenery for small spaces" gives you a filter.

  • What is your shop's positioning? Curated and premium? Wide and affordable? Gift-focused? Subscription-based? The same product can fit one of these and not another.

Now scroll the marketplace with that filter in your head. You're not looking for what's available — you're looking for what fits the customer you decided on.

Pick 1 or 2 anchor suppliers and learn them deeply

The biggest mistake new retailers make is spreading their first 100 SKUs across 10 suppliers. That looks like a "wide assortment" but it kills the most profitable thing you can do: Mix & Match (read Understand Mix & Match if you haven't yet).

Mix & Match only works within one supplier's box. If your customer wants four products from four different suppliers, that's four separate shipments and four separate logistics costs. Margin destroyed.

Instead:

  • Pick 1 or 2 suppliers whose range covers most of your shop's positioning.

  • Map their full catalogue. What pot sizes, plant types, accessories do they offer?

  • Test their box breakpoints by adding products to your cart and watching how shipping changes as you increase quantity (Combine products and maximize margin with Mix & Match walks through exactly how).

  • Build your initial assortment so that a typical customer order combines 2–4 products from one anchor supplier.

Layer cross-sell categories from the same suppliers

Once you have plants from a supplier, look at what else that supplier sells: pots, soil, care tools, gift packaging. Adding these to your shop:

  • Increases average order value without breaking Mix & Match (same supplier, same box).

  • Gives you natural cross-sell blocks on product pages ("plant + matching pot").

  • Lets you build "complete the box" promotions that genuinely improve your margin per order.

When to add a second or third supplier

Add a new supplier only when one of these is true:

  • You've exhausted your anchor supplier's range and your customers are asking for something they don't carry.

  • You spot a clear category gap your audience wants (e.g. you sell plants and pots, customers ask for grow lights).

  • You're entering a deliberately separate sub-niche (e.g. adding a "rare plants" line alongside the everyday range).

For each new supplier, repeat the anchor-supplier exercise: map their range, test their breakpoints, plan products that combine within their boxes — not across them.

The anti-pattern: broad and shallow

It's tempting to add 5 products from 30 suppliers to look like a full shop. Don't.

  • Customers see a thin selection per category, not a wide selection overall.

  • Mix & Match almost never triggers — every order is a single-product, single-shipment order.

  • Your margin per order is at its lowest possible point.

  • You spend support time on dozens of suppliers' quirks instead of getting genuinely good at a few.

Depth beats breadth on Everspring. Two suppliers you know inside-out will out-earn ten suppliers you barely understand.

A note on seasonality and trends

Plants, pots, and gift items have strong seasonal swings. Once you've nailed your anchor assortment, plan small seasonal layers — spring planting, autumn houseplants, December gifting — using the same anchor suppliers wherever possible. Seasonal SKUs are a great place to test bundle deals and "complete the box" promos.

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