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Home Import From China Paying Suppliers Should you tell China suppliers about your target price?
Should you tell China suppliers about your target price? PDF Print E-mail
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Tuesday, 29 March 2011 11:11

by Renaud Anjoran in 'Quality Inspection Blog'

An importer asked me what he should do when Chinese factories ask for his ”price targets.”

I think it is a legitimate question from factories (when it comes to trading companies though, it makes sense to be suspicious).

Here is the sequence I advise importers to follow when they source new suppliers:

  • Get in touch with at least 10 potential suppliers, and ask some questions (about their main market, their size) to evaluate if they are a good fit for your needs.
  • Request quotations (FOB, in USD) from them to get a first pricing (without giving any target).
  • Be in touch with them briefly on the phone, if possible. Human contact will show them that you didn’t send that RFQ to 100 suppliers, and they will be more inclined to give a fast response.
  • You will likely see several very similar quotes: that’s the “market price.” Eliminate all the “outliers” that gave prices 20 percent higher or lower than the average. (If you are consciously looking to buy above the market price to get above-average quality, keep the highest quotes).
  • If you have a team on the ground and if all candidates are in the same area, this is the best time to visit their factories. If this is not easy, continue discussing via email and phone, and pay for factory audits once you have narrowed your search down to one or two candidates.
  • Give more information about your product and your quality requirements to the most interesting candidates. Don’t hesitate to give them your target price if it is very different from what they offer you. Ask them to justify their price level precisely.

Don’t forget, in China, price is very closely tied to quality. If you negotiate a very low price, most suppliers will end up saying yes. Then they will wonder how to make your products. They will probably use the very cheapest materials and subcontract production in a small workshop. You will get what you pay for.

One last piece of advice: if you pay 20 percent above market price, all you risk is wasting 20 percent of the money you disbursed for your project (and actually it is closer to 10 to 15 percent because the FOB price is only a portion of your total landed cost). If you pay 20 percent below market price, you risk getting something that can’t be sold at all (which means you risk losing all your investment).

Do you agree?




Renaud Anjoran is the founder of Sofeast Quality Control and helps importers to improve and secure their product quality in China. He writes advice for importers on the Quality Inspection blog. He lives full time in Shenzhen, China. You can contact him at info@sofeast.com.



 

Comments  

 
0 #1 Jay Peirce 2011-06-20 23:09
Interesting sequence you present and some great points. But your comment on trading companies is off mark – simply because it can prove to be the most efficient way to help your intermediary identify what type of factory to shortlist while providing a good check against required specifications. As you rightly point out, smaller factories often will provide a lower price than a larger, more established manufacturer. However, the QA and QC oversight is often much more labor intensive for the trading company when dealing with a smaller manufacturer. These cost considerations are all part of finding the optimal solution. Target price is not the most important piece of information, but it is not something that should be guarded with suspicion as you suggest.
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