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Qualifying Manufacturers in Asia: 7-Point Checklist

Logisource Insights · SUPPLIER MANAGEMENT · 8 min read

The most expensive sourcing mistakes are not made during production. They are made during supplier selection, often months before the first PO is issued. A factory that looks impressive on Alibaba can deliver a disaster — and a modest workshop with no English website can deliver perfectly.

What separates the two is structured qualification. This is the framework we use internally before recommending any new supplier to a client. It works in China, Vietnam, and across Southeast Asia, and it has caught more bad fits than any single tool we know.

Why upfront qualification is the cheapest insurance you can buy

A failed first order typically costs 3 to 8 times the unit value once you account for delays, rework, air freight to recover the timeline, and the customer impact downstream. The cost of qualifying a supplier properly — including a factory visit and a paid sample round — is usually under 2% of a meaningful first order.

Yet most importers skip steps because qualification feels slow when a project is urgent. Every step skipped here is a coin flip later.

The 7-point qualification framework

1. Verify the legal entity, not the brand

Many Asian suppliers operate under one factory but sell through several trading company names. Always request the business license (营业执照 in China, Giấy phép kinh doanh in Vietnam) and confirm the registered scope of business actually covers what you're buying.

What to check: registration date (avoid companies under 18 months old for critical orders), registered capital, business scope, and whether the entity is a manufacturer or a trader.

2. Confirm production capability, not just willingness

Every supplier will say yes to your inquiry. The question is whether they actually produce what you need, or sub-contract it. Ask for:

  • Photos and video of the relevant production line, with date overlay
  • Machinery list for your specific process
  • Names of three current clients in your category
  • Recent shipping records (export documentation, redacted)

3. Request certifications relevant to your market

Generic certifications mean little. What matters is whether the supplier holds the certifications your destination market requires.

  • For EU markets: CE, REACH compliance, OEKO-TEX for textiles
  • For US markets: CPSIA for children's products, FDA where relevant, ASTM for steel and industrial goods
  • General quality: ISO 9001, BSCI or Sedex (social compliance)

Request the certificate number and verify it on the issuing body's website. Fake certificates are common.

4. Run a paid sampling round with a real spec sheet

Free samples tell you nothing. A paid sample with a complete technical spec sheet tells you everything: whether the supplier reads carefully, communicates clearly, follows instructions, and can hit tolerances.

Include in the spec: materials, dimensions with tolerance, finish requirements, packaging, labeling, and a clear deadline. A supplier who delivers the sample on time, to spec, with proactive communication is almost always a supplier who will perform in production.

5. Conduct a factory audit, ideally in person

Nothing replaces walking the factory floor. If you can't visit personally, hire a local agent or use a third-party audit firm. The audit should cover:

  • Production capacity vs. claimed capacity
  • Cleanliness and organization (a strong signal of management discipline)
  • Worker conditions and headcount
  • QC station presence and protocols
  • Warehouse for raw materials and finished goods

6. Validate payment and trade terms before committing

Standard terms in Asia are 30% deposit, 70% before shipment, often via T/T. Be cautious of suppliers asking for unusual terms: 100% upfront, payment to personal accounts, or beneficiary names that don't match the company name on the invoice.

For first orders, consider trade assurance via Alibaba, an LC for larger amounts, or escrow arrangements.

7. Run a trial order before scaling

Even after all previous steps clear, the real test is a small production run. Use it to validate not just quality but communication during production, response to issues, packing accuracy, and on-time delivery. A supplier who passes a 500-unit trial well is a candidate for the 10,000-unit order. One who struggles at 500 will not improve at scale.

Red flags that should stop the qualification process

Stop the process if you see:

  • Refusal to share business license or registration documents
  • Different company names on quote, contract, and bank instructions
  • Inability to answer technical questions about their own production process
  • Pressure to skip sampling and go straight to production
  • Pricing significantly below market without a clear reason
  • Reluctance to allow a factory visit or third-party audit
  • Communication that switches between multiple people with no consistency

The hidden value of disciplined qualification

Qualification is not just risk management. A supplier that has gone through this process becomes a strategic partner — because they have proven they meet your standards, and they know you take quality seriously. That dynamic alone tends to lift performance over time.

The factories that resent thorough qualification are usually the ones you wouldn't want anyway. The good ones welcome it, because it protects them too.

Need help running this framework on your shortlist?
Logisource handles end-to-end supplier qualification in China, Vietnam, and across Southeast Asia, including factory audits and trial production. Discuss your project →

Key takeaways

  • Skipping qualification steps is the single most common source of expensive sourcing failures.
  • Verify legal entities, certifications, and production capability with documentary evidence.
  • A paid sample round with a real spec sheet predicts production behavior better than any sales call.
  • Factory audits, even remote ones, are non-negotiable for orders of meaningful value.
  • A trial order is your final filter before scaling — treat it as a test, not just a purchase.

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