10 Tips for Quality Sourcing from China
By Sebastien Breteau
Whatever the type of goods, there are some tips that each Importer should keep in mind while importing from China.
At AsiaInspection, we visit 25,000 factories in China every year. This enables us to formulate these “10 tips for Quality Sourcing from China”, that we believe can prove particularly valuable should you deal with Chinese vendors:
- To find Chinese suppliers, do use the Internet (Alibaba.com, Made-in-China.com, GlobalSources.com etc…) and attend Sourcing Tradeshows involving Chinese exhibitors..
- Perform an Audit before making your final choice of vendor in order to validate manufacturing capabilities.
- Ask the factory for a reference sample along with the quotation (the sample is usually free and you pay for the courier fee between China and the destination country).
- Make sure your needs and specifications are well understood, using written comments, as well as pictures and drawings if you don’t speak Chinese.
- Provide your vendor with detailed specifications and clarify your expected level of quality by giving acceptance levels for possible defects.
- Perform an on-site Quality Inspection systematically before shipment (PSI). It is recommended to perform an earlier Inspection to avoid last-minute surprises (DUPRO).
- Make sure you comply with the standards / directives applicable to your product with China as country of origin (REACH, RoHS, CPSIA etc…), by asking your Chinese supplier to have a sample of the product tested and certified by an accredited laboratory.
- Plan things well in advance and take at least 1 week buffer on the Expected Time Arrival (ETA).
- It is good to physically meet with your Chinese vendor and spend time with them in China, in order to strengthen the business relationship through personal bridges.
- Never take the explanation for a “no / impossible” without challenging it…
Sebastien Breteau, AsiaInspection
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May 12th, 2009 at 8:15 am
I agree to all 10 of them as most important.
Nevertheless, practice shows us much more, e.g. don’t expect the Chinese supplier to continue work like agreed if you left him. Also always ask for the status of the project. If you don’t ask frequently they think that project, or them, are not important for you.
It is quite important to be close to your supplier and able to visit him often. Therefor, if your not located in China seek the help of some agents. There are much more which could, and alredy did, fill books.
Greetings from Beijing,
Tom
May 20th, 2009 at 1:55 am
not bad