"He who marches out of step hears another drum." ~ Ken Kesey
Where I worked previously it was done like this in your order, however I disagree with this.In my opinion it should go highest failure rate to lowest failure rate.So I would go screen printing, in order of hardest to easiest based off the image / garment.Then I would do transfers, embroidery, and finishing.What would happen is shirts would be relabeled, hem tags sewn on, front print, sleeve, and then someone would mess up the back print, and all that work prior was a waste.Of course mistakes can happen in the opposite order, but it's much easier to un-sew and resew a label, or do a cover up neck label if you have to, than replace the whole garment and start over.So just to reorder yoursProduction (in this order):Standard screen print - From highest failure rate to lowest (front prints, back prints etc.)Transfers (lower risk) (if multi-dec) / Personalization/transfers / Names/Numbersor Embroidery (low risk) (if a multi-deco job)Finishing:Neck labels (typically printed but maybe transferred)Sewn Labels (beneficial to not go through the dryer)Hang TagsFolding & Bagging / UPC LabelsShippingOf course you cannot always do this as sometimes there is capacity somewhere, or production planning doesn't allow. But in my opinion this is the best practice. Also what if you do the neck labels, but the front print changes colors (didn't look good like on the mockup) and it was supposed to match the print, now you are out of luck.So highest risk to lowest risk is how you should production plan. I think people's human nature is to do the easy print first to get it out of the way, but it's a flawed mentality as if you have a large mistake on the next one it was a waste of capacity, labor, garments.One thing that can suckkkkk is you do all your other work and then doing the "easy" print and you get a screen rip on head one and there goes 18 shirts just like that of one size. Can't production plan for everything!
We do not offer all these services so I am no help. I am curious though. Do you print extras? Have it built in to the cost? Charge differently for exact count or have an over/under run policy with customers? I just a couple 100 polos with left and right chest and both sleeves printed. I padded the order by 4 shirts per size just to be sure that if I found a hole or messed the last print up I would not be too upset. I printed all the extras. I gave them to the customer in a separate box as a gift so she could handle the "I need a different size" on her end and not ask me to do any extras.
If multiple styles are getting the same care labels then it’s literally more work to:Separate all the shirts into each job. Print the fronts. Print the care labels and separate them all again? I would rather print all the labels, separate them into jobs, then print the jobs. It’s simply less work overall.Otherwise you end up sorting them twice. Out of the boxes and again after doing the care labels. Adding a layer of over-production is the start to any waste. In this case it’s over-processing to avoid defect.