I have a real curiosity, it takes a considerable amount of time to have enough sales to consider flushing the market with new products. has no other store, a competing store cropped up such as 1) a foreign competitor, though customers might not be as fond with an unfamiliar face. there is also the talk of property but it would be a good idea to have rumors about a "legitimate" store cropping up. 2) considering this is a misogynistic society (if I recall there was some prejudiced when she wanted to open her own store), has no man try buying out tea from private sellers (such as the one that just visited Chloe some chapters ago), and attempt to sell tea (even if they have no knowledge, it's a trending product). you can say that even when the products are foreign, as long as Chloe is marketing it as a trend, then it should be fine to risk it as a investment.
this story... kind of lacks depth, but there is some consideration... "not my cup of tea", hmmm... does that expression comes from early grey tea? BUT there is an obvious issue. I've seen real tea lovers in comment sections dissect and pick out the details of this series, and her business seem to have plot armor. forget about how weird it was to "school someone about hygiene". the fact that the only scuffles she faced is the "customer taste", which I have to say, doesn't really matter given that it's just her own ideals to want people to genuinely like it- no third party has screwed her over except ofc her loving husband.
Chloe has an immense monopoly on the tea market even if it's her own ideas, no wonder why she's overworked. it's a little unsettling how fast these products get out. it's glaringly obvious that she isn't going to face repercussions from this new investment