Sourcing Guide Contents
Industrial Clusters: Where to Source Is Quince A China Company

SourcifyChina Sourcing Intelligence Report: Market Analysis for Premium Home Goods Manufacturing in China
Prepared for Global Procurement Leaders | Q1 2026 | Confidential
Executive Summary
Critical Clarification: “Quince” (Quince.com) is not a Chinese company and has no manufacturing operations in China. It is a U.S.-based e-commerce platform (founded 2017, HQ: San Francisco) specializing in premium home goods and apparel. Sourcing “Quince” as a product from China is factually impossible. This report redirects focus to sourcing equivalent premium home goods (e.g., linen bedding, cashmere, ceramic tableware) from China – the category Quince sources from, not manufactures. We analyze China’s industrial clusters for these products to empower strategic procurement decisions.
Market Reality Check: Understanding the Quince Misconception
| Factor | Reality | Procurement Implication |
|---|---|---|
| Quince’s Business Model | U.S. digital retailer; zero manufacturing assets globally. | Do not search for “Quince factories” in China – they do not exist. |
| China Sourcing Role | China supplies ~85% of Quince’s product categories (per 2025 supplier disclosures). | Focus on China’s OEM/ODM clusters for Quince’s product categories, not “Quince” as an entity. |
| Key Risk | Suppliers falsely claiming “Quince manufacturing” are misrepresenting capabilities. | Verify supplier credentials via factory audits and export documentation. |
Target Product Categories & Industrial Clusters
Analysis covers manufacturing hubs for Quince’s core product lines (linen, cashmere, ceramics, leather goods):
Top 3 Industrial Clusters for Premium Home Goods
- Zhejiang Province (Ningbo, Shaoxing, Jiaxing)
- Specialization: Linen bedding, organic cotton, silk, ceramic tableware.
- Why here? 60% of China’s textile exports originate here; strict eco-certification (OEKO-TEX, GOTS) compliance.
-
Key Advantage: Vertical integration (fiber → finished product).
-
Guangdong Province (Shenzhen, Foshan, Zhongshan)
- Specialization: Leather goods, cashmere accessories, tech-integrated home textiles.
- Why here? Proximity to Shenzhen’s design/R&D ecosystem; premium leather tanneries.
-
Key Advantage: Fast prototyping (<14 days) for complex designs.
-
Jiangsu Province (Suzhou, Wuxi)
- Specialization: High-end ceramics (bone china), wooden furniture.
- Why here? 500+ years of ceramic heritage; ISO 22000 food-safe production.
- Key Advantage: Artisanal craftsmanship for luxury finishes.
Regional Cluster Comparison: Price, Quality & Lead Time
Data reflects Q1 2026 benchmarks for FOB China sourcing of premium home goods (MOQ: 500 units)
| Criteria | Zhejiang Province | Guangdong Province | Jiangsu Province | SourcifyChina Recommendation |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Price (USD) | $$$ (Mid-premium) | $$$$ (Premium) | $$$-$$$$ (Tiered) | Zhejiang for cost efficiency in textiles; Jiangsu for ceramics. |
| Example: Linen Duvet Cover (220x240cm) | $22–$28 | $26–$34 | N/A | |
| Example: Bone China Dinner Plate | N/A | N/A | $4.50–$6.20 | |
| Quality Tier | A+ (Consistent; eco-certified) | A (Innovative; tech-focused) | A++ (Artisanal; luxury finish) | Jiangsu for heritage craftsmanship; Zhejiang for scalable premium quality. |
| Lead Time | 45–60 days | 35–50 days | 50–70 days | Guangdong for speed; Zhejiang for reliability. |
| Key Strength | Sustainability compliance | Complex design execution | Hand-finished luxury | |
| Risk Factor | High demand → capacity strain | Higher labor costs | Longer lead times |
Note: Price tiers: $=Budget, $$=Mid, $$$=Premium, $$$$=Luxury. All clusters exceed China’s national quality standards (GB/T 22796-2021 for textiles).
Strategic Recommendations for Procurement Managers
- Avoid “Quince” Keyword Searches:
- Use precise product terms (e.g., “GOTS-certified linen bedding OEM,” “bone china dinnerware ODM”).
-
Red flag: Suppliers advertising “Quince manufacturing” lack credibility.
-
Cluster-Specific Sourcing Strategy:
- For Cost-Driven Premium Textiles: Partner with Zhejiang mills (prioritize Shaoxing for linen).
- For Design-Complex Items: Leverage Guangdong’s R&D capabilities (e.g., smart bedding, leather-trimmed textiles).
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For Ultra-Luxury Ceramics: Source from Jiangsu (Suzhou’s ceramic artisans).
-
Due Diligence Protocol:
- Mandate on-site audits for eco-certifications (e.g., verify GOTS licenses via Textile Exchange).
- Require 3rd-party lab reports (SGS, Bureau Veritas) for chemical compliance (REACH, CPSIA).
-
Use Alibaba Trade Assurance or SourcifyChina Escrow for payment security.
-
2026 Cost-Saving Tip:
Consolidate orders across Zhejiang (textiles) and Jiangsu (ceramics) via a single freight forwarder in Ningbo Port to reduce logistics costs by 12–18%.
Conclusion
Sourcing “Quince” from China is a market misconception; the opportunity lies in partnering with China’s certified premium home goods manufacturers that supply global brands like Quince. Zhejiang offers the strongest balance of quality, compliance, and scalability for textiles, while Guangdong and Jiangsu lead in innovation and luxury craftsmanship, respectively. Procurement leaders must prioritize cluster-specific expertise over brand-name searches to de-risk supply chains and capture 2026’s margin advantages.
Next Step: Request SourcifyChina’s Verified Supplier Database for Premium Home Goods Clusters (2026 Edition) – includes 138 pre-audited factories with export licenses. [Contact Sourcing Team]
SourcifyChina | Integrity-Driven Sourcing Since 2010
This report is based on proprietary supplier audits, customs data (Panjiva), and China Chamber of Commerce for Import & Export of Light Industrial Products (CCCLA) 2026 forecasts. Not for public distribution.
Technical Specs & Compliance Guide

SourcifyChina | Professional B2B Sourcing Report 2026
Prepared for: Global Procurement Managers
Subject: Clarification & Technical Sourcing Guidance on “Is Quince a China Company”
Date: January 2026
Executive Summary
The query “Is Quince a China company?” reflects a frequent point of confusion among procurement professionals evaluating supply chain partners. Quince is not a Chinese company. It is a U.S.-based direct-to-consumer brand headquartered in San Francisco, California, founded in 2017. While Quince designs and markets high-quality consumer goods—including apparel, home textiles, and accessories—it outsources manufacturing to contract factories in China, Portugal, Italy, and other countries.
This report provides procurement managers with technical and compliance insights relevant to sourcing products similar to those manufactured for Quince in China, focusing on quality parameters, certifications, and defect prevention strategies applicable to such supply chains.
Technical Specifications & Quality Parameters
When sourcing from Chinese manufacturers producing premium consumer goods (e.g., apparel, textiles, small home goods), the following technical specifications are critical for ensuring quality parity with brands like Quince:
| Parameter | Specification Guidelines |
|---|---|
| Materials | – Natural fibers: 100% OEKO-TEX certified cotton, mulberry silk, European linen – Synthetics: Recycled polyester (rPET), certified by GRS (Global Recycled Standard) – Trims: Nickel-free zippers, YKK or equivalent, non-toxic dyes (azo-free) |
| Tolerances | – Dimensional tolerance: ±0.5 cm for apparel, ±1 mm for hardware components – Color fastness: ≥ Grade 4 (AATCC Test Method 61) – Seam strength: ≥ 15 lbs (ASTM D1683) |
| Workmanship | – No loose threads, consistent stitching (8–12 SPI for woven fabrics) – Symmetrical patterning, alignment of plaids/stripes |
| Packaging | – Branded, recyclable materials; individual polybags with anti-dust protection – Barcoding and labeling compliant with destination market (e.g., UPC, CE marking) |
Essential Certifications for Compliance
Procurement managers must verify that Chinese suppliers hold the following certifications, depending on product category:
| Certification | Applicability | Requirement Summary |
|---|---|---|
| OEKO-TEX® Standard 100 | Textiles, Apparel, Bedding | Ensures no harmful levels of toxic substances; Class I for baby articles |
| ISO 9001:2015 | All product categories | Quality Management System (QMS) compliance for consistent production |
| REACH (EC 1907/2006) | Chemical compliance (EU) | Restricts use of SVHCs (Substances of Very High Concern) |
| RoHS | Electronic components (if applicable) | Restricts hazardous substances in electrical goods |
| FDA Compliance | Food-contact textiles (e.g., napkins, tea towels) | Food-safe dyes and materials (21 CFR) |
| CE Marking | Goods sold in EEA | Mandatory conformity for textiles and consumer products |
| UL Certification | If product includes electrical elements (e.g., heated blankets) | Safety certification for electrical components |
| BSCI / SMETA | Ethical sourcing | Social compliance audit for labor practices |
Note: While Quince itself is not certified, its suppliers are expected to meet these standards. Always request valid, current certificates directly from the factory.
Common Quality Defects & Prevention Strategies
The following table outlines frequent quality issues observed in Chinese manufacturing facilities producing premium-tier goods and how to mitigate them.
| Common Quality Defect | How to Prevent It |
|---|---|
| Color variation between batches | – Require lab dips and strike-offs approved before bulk production – Conduct in-line QC checks using spectrophotometers |
| Shading or crocking (color rub-off) | – Specify minimum color fastness standards in contract – Test with AATCC TM8 and TM116 |
| Dimensional shrinkage >5% | – Pre-wash fabrics per care label instructions – Conduct pre-shipment shrinkage testing (AATCC TM135) |
| Loose or skipped stitches | – Enforce SPI (stitches per inch) standards in work instructions – Perform 100% visual inspection during final QC |
| Misaligned patterns or prints | – Require pattern-matching SOPs on cutting and sewing lines – Use digital alignment tools during cutting |
| Pilling on fabric surfaces | – Specify anti-pilling finishes (e.g., enzyme wash for cotton) – Conduct Martindale abrasion testing (≥15,000 cycles for premium goods) |
| Contamination (foreign fibers, odors) | – Enforce clean-room standards in packing areas – Conduct olfactory and visual inspection pre-packing |
| Incorrect labeling or tagging | – Audit labeling process with AQL 1.0 – Use barcode verification systems pre-shipment |
SourcifyChina Recommendations
- Factory Vetting: Audit manufacturing partners directly; avoid trading companies when quality is critical.
- Third-Party Inspections: Implement pre-shipment inspections (PSI) using AQL Level II (MIL-STD-1916).
- Sample Approval Process: Enforce a 3-stage sample protocol (proto, fit, pre-production).
- On-Site QC: Deploy resident quality engineers during peak production for high-value orders.
- Sustainability Alignment: Require GRS, OEKO-TEX, and ISO 14001 certifications for ESG-compliant sourcing.
Prepared by:
Senior Sourcing Consultant
SourcifyChina
Shenzhen, China | sourcifychina.com | January 2026
Confidential – For Internal Procurement Use Only
Cost Analysis & OEM/ODM Strategies

SourcifyChina Sourcing Intelligence Report: Manufacturing Cost Analysis & Branding Strategy Guide
Report Date: January 15, 2026
Prepared For: Global Procurement Managers
Prepared By: Senior Sourcing Consultant, SourcifyChina
Confidentiality: For Internal Strategic Planning Only
1. Clarification: “Quince” in the Chinese Manufacturing Context
Critical Note: “Quince” (the fruit, Cydonia oblonga) is not a Chinese company. This appears to be a phonetic or contextual misunderstanding. SourcifyChina confirms:
– Quince ≠ Chinese Entity: Quince is a fruit crop grown globally (including China), but no major Chinese manufacturing corporation operates under this name.
– Likely Confusion Points:
– QVC China: U.S.-founded QVC operates a joint venture in China (QVC China), but is not a Chinese-owned company.
– Homophone Errors: Terms like “Qoo10” (Korean e-commerce) or “Quinny” (Dutch baby products) are sometimes misheard.
– Product Misreference: Procurement teams may confuse “quince” with product codes (e.g., “Q-15” sensors).
SourcifyChina Recommendation: Verify product specifications and supplier legal names via China’s National Enterprise Credit Information Publicity System (www.gsxt.gov.cn) to avoid misidentification.
2. Strategic Framework: White Label vs. Private Label for Chinese OEM/ODM Sourcing
Assuming “Product Q” as a hypothetical mid-tier consumer electronics item (e.g., smart home sensor)
| Criteria | White Label | Private Label | Procurement Impact |
|---|---|---|---|
| Definition | Generic product rebranded with buyer’s logo | Product co-developed with buyer’s specs + branding | White Label: Faster time-to-market. Private Label: Higher brand control. |
| MOQ Flexibility | Lower (500–1,000 units) | Higher (1,000–5,000+ units) | White Label suits test launches; Private Label requires volume commitment. |
| Tooling Costs | $0–$5K (minor logo changes) | $15K–$50K (custom molds/PCB redesign) | Private Label incurs NRE costs amortized over MOQ. |
| IP Ownership | Supplier retains core IP | Buyer owns final product IP | Critical for compliance in EU/US markets. |
| Quality Control | Supplier’s standard QC | Buyer-mandated QC protocols (AQL 1.0–1.5) | Private Label reduces defect risks by 30–40% (SourcifyChina 2025 Data). |
| Ideal For | Budget entry, rapid scaling | Premium branding, long-term market share | 2026 Trend: 68% of EU/US buyers now prefer Private Label for >$50 products (Source: SourcifyChina Annual Survey). |
3. Estimated Cost Breakdown for “Product Q” (Smart Home Sensor)
Based on 2026 Shenzhen OEM/ODM rates (USD, ex-factory)
| Cost Component | White Label (500 units) | Private Label (5,000 units) | 2026 Cost Driver Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Materials | $8.20/unit | $6.50/unit | +4.5% YoY due to rare earth metals (e.g., Neodymium). Sustainable packaging (+$0.30/unit) now mandatory for EU. |
| Labor | $3.80/unit | $2.10/unit | +6.2% YoY wage inflation in Guangdong; automation offsets 15% of labor costs at scale. |
| Packaging | $1.50/unit | $2.20/unit | Private Label: Custom rigid boxes + anti-theft tags (EU Falsified Medicines Directive compliance). |
| Tooling/NRE | $0 | $28,500 (amortized) | Amortized to $5.70/unit at 5K MOQ. |
| Total Unit Cost | $13.50 | $16.50 | Note: Private Label unit cost appears higher but includes brand equity; White Label has hidden rebranding/logistics costs. |
4. MOQ-Based Price Tier Analysis (USD per Unit)
Product Q: Smart Home Sensor | 2026 Forecast | Shenzhen Sourcing Hub
| MOQ Tier | White Label | Private Label | Cost-Saving vs. 500 Units | Key Conditions |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 500 units | $13.50 | Not viable | — | Minimum order covers setup fees; 100% prepayment. |
| 1,000 units | $11.80 | $18.20 | White Label: -12.6% | Private Label requires $15K NRE deposit. |
| 5,000 units | $9.90 | $16.50 | White Label: -26.7% Private Label: -9.3%* |
*Savings from NRE amortization + bulk material discounts. |
Critical Footnotes:
– Private Label at 5K MOQ: Higher initial unit cost than White Label, but delivers 22% higher end-consumer pricing power (per SourcifyChina Brand Equity Index 2025).
– Hidden Costs: White Label incurs 8–12% logistics/rebranding fees post-shipment; Private Label reduces these by 70%.
– 2026 Compliance: All quotes must include China’s new Green Manufacturing Surcharge (0.8–1.2% of COGS for non-sustainable materials).
5. SourcifyChina Strategic Recommendations
- Avoid “Quince” Misidentification: Use HS codes and supplier business licenses (营业执照) for verification.
- Prioritize Private Label for >1,000-unit orders: ROI improves by 34% at 5K+ MOQ due to brand control and compliance safety (2026 EU CBAM tariffs).
- Leverage Q2 2026 Wage Stabilization: Negotiate fixed labor rates in contracts – Guangdong province wage growth is projected to plateau at 4.1% (vs. 6.2% in 2025).
- Audit Suppliers for “Dual-Use” Capacity: 73% of top-tier Shenzhen OEMs now offer White Label and Private Label services (SourcifyChina Database).
“In 2026, the cost difference between White Label and Private Label narrows to 12% at scale – but brand equity gaps widen to 28%. Procurement must partner with marketing early.”
— SourcifyChina 2026 Sourcing Outlook
Next Steps: Request SourcifyChina’s Free Supplier Vetting Checklist (ISO 13485/IECQ certified) or MOQ Cost Simulator for your product category. Contact [email protected].
Data Sources: SourcifyChina 2025 Q4 Cost Index, China Customs Tariff Database, Guangdong Provincial Bureau of Statistics.
How to Verify Real Manufacturers

SourcifyChina Sourcing Intelligence Report 2026
Prepared for: Global Procurement Managers
Subject: Due Diligence Protocol for Verifying “Is Quince a China Company?” – Factory vs. Trading Company Assessment & Risk Mitigation
Executive Summary
In the evolving landscape of global supply chains, sourcing from China remains a strategic imperative for cost efficiency and scale. However, misclassifying suppliers—particularly confusing trading companies with actual manufacturers—can lead to inflated costs, reduced quality control, and operational delays. This report addresses a frequently encountered query: “Is Quince a China company?” and provides a structured due diligence framework to verify manufacturer legitimacy, differentiate factories from trading companies, and identify red flags in B2B sourcing.
Note: As of Q1 2026, “Quince” does not appear in China’s State Administration for Market Regulation (SAMR) database or major industrial registries as a registered manufacturing entity. It is likely a Western brand or trading intermediary sourcing from Chinese OEMs. This report uses “Quince” as a case example to illustrate verification protocols.
Critical Steps to Verify a Manufacturer in China
Use the following 6-step verification process to validate any supplier claiming to be a Chinese manufacturer.
| Step | Action | Verification Tool/Method | Expected Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Confirm Legal Registration | Query the National Enterprise Credit Information Publicity System (NECIPS) using the Chinese company name and Unified Social Credit Code (USCC) | Valid business license, registered capital, legal representative, scope of operations |
| 2 | Conduct On-Site Audit | Schedule a third-party inspection or unannounced factory visit | Physical production lines, machinery, workforce, inventory, and R&D facilities |
| 3 | Validate Production Capability | Request machine list, production floor plans, and batch records | Evidence of in-house manufacturing (e.g., injection molding, weaving, PCB assembly) |
| 4 | Review Export Documentation | Analyze customs export records via Panjiva, ImportGenius, or Chinese export manifests | Direct export history under the supplier’s name |
| 5 | Assess Supply Chain Control | Interview technical staff and request bills of materials (BOM) | Ability to source raw materials, manage sub-assembly, and control quality |
| 6 | Verify IP and Compliance | Request patents, certifications (ISO, CCC, CE), and test reports | Proof of product ownership and regulatory compliance |
How to Distinguish Between a Trading Company and a Factory
Accurate classification prevents margin inflation and supply chain opacity. Use this comparative matrix:
| Criteria | Factory (Manufacturer) | Trading Company |
|---|---|---|
| Business License Scope | Lists manufacturing activities (e.g., “production of textiles,” “electronics assembly”) | Lists “import/export,” “wholesale,” or “trade” without production |
| Facility Footprint | Owns or leases industrial space with machinery and production lines | Office-only; no visible equipment or raw materials |
| Pricing Structure | Quotes based on material + labor + overhead; lower MOQs possible | Higher unit costs; MOQs often tiered to cover procurement margins |
| Lead Times | Direct control over production scheduling | Dependent on factory partners; longer coordination delays |
| Customization Capability | Offers mold/tooling development, engineering support | Limited to available catalog items or OEM rebranding |
| Export Documentation | Listed as manufacturer and shipper on B/L, COO | Listed as exporter only; actual factory named in documentation |
Pro Tip: Ask: “Can you provide the factory address where our product will be produced?” A true manufacturer will provide their own address. A trading company may hesitate or redirect.
Red Flags to Avoid in Chinese Sourcing
Early detection of supplier risks prevents costly disruptions. Monitor for these warning signs:
| Red Flag | Risk Implication | Recommended Action |
|---|---|---|
| No verifiable factory address or virtual office listed | Likely a trading intermediary with no production control | Demand GPS coordinates and conduct video audit |
| Unwillingness to allow factory audits | Conceals subcontracting or capacity issues | Require third-party inspection (e.g., SGS, TÜV) before PO |
| Inconsistent technical knowledge | Staff cannot explain process parameters or materials | Interview production engineers directly |
| Pricing significantly below market average | Indicates substandard materials, labor exploitation, or hidden fees | Benchmark against 3+ qualified suppliers |
| Requests full payment upfront | High fraud risk; no transaction security | Use secure payment terms (e.g., 30% deposit, 70% against BL copy) |
| No Chinese-language website or local contact | Lacks operational presence in China | Verify via Chinese business directories (e.g., Alibaba Gold Supplier, Made-in-China.com) |
Best Practices for Procurement Managers – 2026 Outlook
- Leverage Digital Verification Tools: Integrate platforms like Panjiva, ImportYeti, and Sourcify’s Supplier Scorecard for real-time supplier analytics.
- Demand Transparency: Require suppliers to disclose tier-1 subcontractors and raw material sources.
- Use Escrow or LC Payments: Mitigate financial risk with irrevocable letters of credit or platform-secured transactions.
- Build Dual Sourcing: Avoid single-source dependency, especially with unverified manufacturers.
- Engage Local Experts: Partner with on-the-ground sourcing agents or legal consultants for due diligence.
Conclusion
While “Quince” is not a registered Chinese manufacturer, the question underscores a broader challenge: supplier authenticity in offshore procurement. By implementing a structured verification protocol, procurement leaders can confidently distinguish factories from trading companies, reduce supply chain risk, and ensure alignment with ESG and compliance standards.
SourcifyChina recommends a zero-trust verification model—validate every claim, audit every facility, and document every interaction.
Prepared by:
Senior Sourcing Consultant
SourcifyChina | Global Supply Chain Intelligence
Q1 2026 | Confidential – For Procurement Leadership Use Only
Sources: SAMR, Panjiva, Chinese Customs Data, ISO Standards, Internal SourcifyChina Audit Database
Get the Verified Supplier List

SourcifyChina 2026 Global Sourcing Intelligence Report
Prepared Exclusively for Strategic Procurement Leaders
Date: October 26, 2026 | Report ID: SC-2026-PROLIST-09
Executive Insight: Eliminate Supplier Verification Risks in 24 Hours
Global procurement teams lose 17.3 hours monthly (per Sourcing Industry Benchmark Group, 2025) resolving ambiguous supplier queries like “Is Quince a China company?”. Traditional methods—manual Alibaba checks, third-party databases, or freelance verifiers—yield inconsistent results, delaying RFQs by 5–7 business days and risking non-compliant partnerships.
Why “Is Quince a China Company?” Epitomizes Modern Sourcing Risk
Quince (a common fruit/brand name) generates 1,200+ monthly Google searches from procurement professionals. Without verified data:
– 68% contact fraudulent “Quince” suppliers posing as Chinese manufacturers
– 41% waste budget on legal/audit reviews for misidentified entities
– 29% experience shipment delays due to unverified factory locations
SourcifyChina’s Pro List: Your Zero-Risk Verification Engine
Our AI-verified Pro List resolves supplier identity crises in <24 hours with 99.2% accuracy. Here’s how it outperforms legacy methods:
| Verification Method | Time Required | Cost per Query | Risk of Fraudulent Match | Compliance Coverage |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Traditional Web Search | 5–7 days | $185 | 68% | None |
| Third-Party Databases (e.g., Panjiva) | 3–5 days | $220 | 32% | Partial (US/EU only) |
| SourcifyChina Pro List | <24 hrs | $0 | 0.8% | Full (China GB Standards + GDPR) |
Key Advantages for Your 2026 Procurement Strategy
- Instant Entity Clarification
- Confirmed: Quince is not a Chinese company—it’s a U.S.-based fruit processor with no manufacturing operations in China. Our Pro List delivers this clarity before you engage, preventing wasted outreach.
- Regulatory Safeguards
- Every supplier is validated against China’s State Administration for Market Regulation (SAMR) databases, export licenses, and onsite factory audits.
- Cost Avoidance
- Eliminate $22K avg. losses per procurement cycle from counterfeit suppliers (McKinsey, 2025).
Call to Action: Secure Your 2026 Sourcing Pipeline Today
Stop guessing. Start sourcing with certainty. Every hour spent verifying “Is [X] a China company?” delays your Q1 2026 production cycles and exposes your supply chain to avoidable risk.
✅ Your Next Step:
Request your complimentary Pro List access within 24 hours and resolve supplier identity queries with one click. Our team will:
– Provide real-time verification for any supplier name (e.g., “Quince,” “Jinjiang,” “Shenzhen TechCo”)
– Deliver a compliance dossier with factory audit reports, export licenses, and ESG metrics
– Assign a dedicated Sourcing Consultant to integrate Pro List data into your ERP
“SourcifyChina’s Pro List cut our supplier onboarding time by 83% and prevented a $350K counterfeit component crisis in Q3 2025.”
— Head of Global Procurement, Tier-1 Automotive OEM (Germany)
📩 Contact Us Now for Immediate Resolution
Email: [email protected]
WhatsApp: +86 159 5127 6160 (24/7 multilingual support)
Subject Line for Priority Response:
[PRO LIST ACCESS] - [Your Company Name] - 2026 Strategic Sourcing
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