GALLERY
Football-inspired gifts made for LG shoppers
Founded in 2005 and headquartered in Bengaluru, Unilet Appliances Pvt Ltd is a multi-brand consumer electronics retail chain serving customers across Karnataka. From its first outlets in BTM Layout and Hanumantha Nagar, the company has expanded to more than 50 stores offering televisions, smartphones, laptops, refrigerators, washing machines, kitchen appliances, and other lifestyle technology products from leading brands. Unilet has built its reputation around dependable service and a hands-on retail experience. At this scale, merchandise orders also need to be organised, consistent, and simple to distribute.
Unilet came to Yoode with a football-themed merchandise requirement for 200 recipients. The order included 100 Messi jerseys and 100 Ronaldo jerseys, with each player design divided equally between size 42 and size 44. Alongside the jerseys, they needed 200 Rare Rabbit duffle bags with shoe pockets, 200 footballs, and 200 water bottles. The quantities formed 200 complete sports sets. Rather than coordinating multiple suppliers, the team wanted one partner to manage the full requirement, maintain accurate counts, and deliver everything ready for distribution.
Messi and Ronaldo designs each needed 50 pieces in size 42 and 50 pieces in size 44. A small counting or labelling error could leave one group with the wrong size or design, so all four jersey batches had to be tracked independently throughout production and packing.
This was more than a jersey order. Each final set depended on one jersey, one duffle bag, one football, and one water bottle. These products follow different sourcing and inspection processes, but all four categories had to come together in matching quantities as one organised delivery.Â
Jersey finishing, size accuracy, bag condition, football quality, and bottle appearance all needed careful checks. The Rare Rabbit duffle bags also had to include the requested shoe compartment, making model verification important before the products could be cleared for packing.Â
Large mixed orders become difficult to manage when products are packed without a clear system. Unilet needed to identify Messi and Ronaldo jerseys by size without opening and recounting every carton, so the final packing plan had to support quick and accurate distribution.Â
We divided the requirement into seven controlled batches: four jersey batches based on player and size, plus separate batches for duffle bags, footballs, and water bottles. A master quantity sheet tracked every category from confirmation through final packing, protecting the exact 50-piece jersey split and the 200-unit accessory counts.
Messi and Ronaldo jerseys were handled separately, with sizes 42 and 44 labelled as individual production groups. The duffle bags were checked for the requested Rare Rabbit model and shoe-pocket feature, while the footballs and bottles were inspected for visible defects and consistency.
After every category was complete, the products were organised around 200 final sets. Clear outer labels identified jersey design and size, helping the Unilet team distribute the merchandise without unnecessary sorting, supplier follow-ups, or last-minute recounting.
We recorded every product, quantity, jersey design, and size split before fulfilment began. The plan separated Messi size 42, Messi size 44, Ronaldo size 42, and Ronaldo size 44, with 50 units assigned to each batch.
The jersey themes and sizes were verified along with the accessory requirements. We also confirmed that the selected Rare Rabbit duffle bag included the requested shoe pocket, ensuring the supplied model matched the brief.
The complete item list and batch plan were reviewed as one order before fulfilment. This gave both teams a clear reference for what would be supplied and how quantities would be checked at each stage
The four jersey batches were produced and tracked separately while bags, footballs, and bottles were sourced in parallel. Each category received its own quality check before the products were brought together for final packing.
Every product was counted again during packing. Jerseys were labelled by player and size, while the remaining items were grouped in matching quantities. The order was then delivered in a distribution-ready format with each category easy to identify.