Ordering custom products from China is easiest when the buyer treats the first message as a production brief. The factory needs to know what is being made, how it will be branded, how many units are needed, where the goods are going, and what must be approved before bulk production starts.
Start With a Factory-Ready Brief
A useful RFQ includes product type, target quantity, logo file, Pantone references, size, material preference, packaging request, destination country, and target delivery date. If the buyer only asks for a unit price, the supplier may quote a basic product without labels, private packaging, inspection, or realistic freight assumptions.
For buyers still comparing categories, the low MOQ custom products collection is a better starting point than a single product page because it shows which product types can work for small-batch testing.
Normalize Quotes Before Comparing Suppliers
A cheaper quote is not always a better quote. Compare material, size, logo method, packing method, sample policy, QC scope, and shipping term. A factory-direct quote should make these assumptions visible before the buyer approves sampling.
When the order is for a campaign or exhibition, the trade show giveaways collection helps buyers connect product choice with event timing, logo visibility, and packed unit requirements.
Use Sampling as a Production Gate
The approved sample should lock colour, size, finish, logo position, label placement, packaging, and carton details. If the buyer approves only a mockup, the bulk order can drift away from the expected retail or promotional presentation.
For branded resale or online shop programs, use the private label ready collection to identify products where labels, hang tags, barcodes, and packing should be discussed before price comparison.