You're the president of your fraternity, sorority, club sports team, or student organization. You've got 37 people who all want different things, a group chat that won't stop pinging, and a merch deadline that's closer than you think.
Sound familiar?
Ordering custom apparel for a group is one of the most universally dreaded parts of being a campus leader. It shouldn't be. Here's everything you need to know to make it painless - and actually end up with garments your members will be proud to wear.
Why Group Apparel Orders Go Wrong
Before we get into solutions, let's talk about why most group orders turn into a disaster:
The size chaos problem. Someone always forgets to submit their size. Then you're chasing down 8 people three days before the deadline, and you still end up ordering two extra larges that nobody wants.
The design-by-committee trap. You ask everyone for input on the design and end up with 23 conflicting opinions, a group chat civil war, and a final product that satisfies nobody.
The payment nightmare. Collecting $35 from 50 people via Venmo, Zelle, and "I'll get you later" is a part-time job nobody signed up for.
The quality disappointment. You spend weeks coordinating everything, the gear finally arrives, and it looks nothing like what you expected. Thin fabric, blurry graphics, colours that don't match your school.
The good news? All of these are solvable with the right approach and the right partner.
Step 1: Lead With the Design, Not the Vote
Here's the single biggest thing you can do to speed up your order: make the design decision yourself, or with one other person, and present it to the group as a near-final product.
The moment you open the floor to full group input, you've added two weeks to your timeline and introduced unlimited opportunities for disagreement. People are far more likely to approve something they can see than agree on something abstract.
Pick your colours (ideally your school or org colours), your style (crewneck, hoodie, tee), and a general design direction. Then present it. You'll get minor tweaks, not a design revolution.
Step 2: Set a Hard Deadline - and Stick to It
The people who don't submit their sizes on time are not going to submit their sizes. This is a universal law of campus org life.
Set your size submission deadline at least four days before you actually need to place the order. Tell everyone the deadline is three days earlier than it actually is. Yes, this is deceptive. Yes, it works every time.
Use a simple Google Form to collect sizes and payments in one place. If you're using a platform that collects payment at checkout, even better - no payment means no order, which solves the chasing problem entirely.
Step 3: Know Your Minimums
Most custom apparel providers have minimum order quantities. Understanding these upfront saves you from the awkward situation of having 12 interested people but a 24-piece minimum.
At Crew Dog, we work with groups of all sizes - from small executive boards to full chapter orders of 100+. The key is knowing your numbers before you start so you can set expectations and price accordingly.
A good rule of thumb: always add 10-15% to your headcount estimate. There will be people who join late, people who want extras, and people who buy one for a friend. Better to have buffer than to turn people away.
Step 4: Think About What Actually Gets Worn
The goal isn't just to order something - it's to order something your members will wear on repeat, not just once at the event and never again.
A few things that make the difference:
Quality fabric lasts. A premium heavyweight crewneck that feels great going on will get worn for years. A cheap, thin tee will end up at the back of a drawer by spring.
Timeless beats trendy. Loud graphics and novelty designs feel fun at ordering time but date quickly. A clean, well-embroidered design with your school and org details will still look good in five years.
Embroidery over print. Embroidery holds up wash after wash and has a premium look that printed graphics simply can't match. If you're ordering gear that represents your organization, it should look the part.
Step 5: Keep It Simple for Reorders
The best campus org leaders think one step ahead. Once you've got a design you love, save it. Make it your org's standard piece that you reorder each year for new members. This eliminates the design process entirely next time, makes your org's identity consistent, and means new members can always get the piece that seniors are wearing.
It also makes you look extremely organized to whoever comes after you - which is worth something.
How Crew Dog Makes It Easy
We built Crew Dog specifically for situations like this. Our process is designed to take the friction out of group orders:
Custom design support. Not a designer? No problem. Send us your org details, colours, and a general idea, and we'll handle the artwork. Every design starts hand-drawn and can be either printed or digitized specifically for embroidery.
Flexible order sizes. Whether you're ordering for a 8-person exec board or a 200-person chapter, we've got you covered. (8 is really the lowest we can go for at the moment though).
Quality you can actually feel. Boxy heavyweight fabric, large-scale embroidery, and a cheeky quality check on every piece before it ships.
Simple communication. Have questions, need a design tweak, or want to check on your order? Reach us directly at team@crew-dog.com. No ticketing system, no automated replies, just a member of our crew on the other end of the line.
The Bottom Line
Group apparel orders don't have to be stressful. The leaders who make it look easy aren't lucky - they've just got a clear process and a supplier they trust.
Set your deadline, lead on the design, collect sizes and payment together, and order with enough buffer to cover the latecomers. Do that, and you'll have gear in hand before the next org leader is even starting their search.
Ready to get started? Request a custom design here or email us at team@crew-dog.com and we'll get the ball rolling.