wiki/clients/current/doudlah-farms/2026-01-30-logistics-inventory-crisis.md Layer 2 article Client: Doudlah Farms 743 words Updated: 2026-01-30
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doodla logistics inventory amazon fee-restructure action-items

Logistics & Inventory Crisis — Fee Restructure Proposal

Discussed during [1].

Overview

Doodla's logistics and inventory management has reached a breaking point. Jason (Doodla's primary operator) is stretched across farming, B2C fulfillment, wholesale, and Amazon — with no additional staff. The result is chronic stockouts, delayed Amazon shipments, and an unsustainable administrative burden on Asymmetric's team. The current 4% fee does not compensate for the operational overhead being absorbed.

A "come-to-Jesus" call with Doodla leadership is being scheduled for early the week of Feb 3 to propose a restructured engagement model.


The Problem

Operational Chaos

Stockouts Are Killing Revenue

Root Cause


Proposed Solution

Fee Increase: 4% → ~10%

New Scope: Asymmetric Manages Inventory & Packing

Why This Makes Sense

Alternative (Lighter) Option


Current Revenue Context

Metric Value
Jan 2026 projected revenue ~$138,000
Asymmetric fee @ 4% ~$9,500
Daily revenue rate ~$4,400–$4,600
Amazon daily profit (approx.) ~$1,700

Revenue growth trend is strong month-over-month when inventory is available. Organic unit sales are healthy, keeping ad costs controlled. The constraint is entirely operational.


The [2] — a potential $50k–$100k wholesale order (40k–80k lbs of black beans) — makes resolving the logistics situation even more urgent. That order cannot be fulfilled reliably under the current model.


Action Items


Key Quotes

"We need to have another come-to-Jesus conversation… you know, first of all, we're doing much more work than we anticipated. And even the little 4% we're getting, it doesn't amount to anything when you compare it to the amount of time we're spending." — Mark

"I see the train wreck about to happen, and I feel like there's nothing I can do." — Karly

"They've got the beans and they've got the popcorn. They've got it. The problem is the logistics." — Mark