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Quality & Supply Process
Make the RFQ useful before quoting.
The first job is to clarify product fit, application, quality expectation, destination and timing. A serious quote should be based on buyer context, not a blind template.
Process
From buying context to quote-ready discussion.
- 1. RFQ intake: collect product, specification, quantity, destination and timing through the website form or email.
- 2. Fit check: confirm whether the product line and expected use case are aligned.
- 3. Document check: clarify whether COA, packing information, inspection or other documents are required.
- 4. Commercial review: price, delivery time, payment terms and availability are reviewed after the above context is clear.
- 5. Follow-up: buyer questions are tracked by product, country, application and next action.
Important boundary
This process page explains how RFQs are handled. It does not commit to price, inventory, delivery schedule, payment terms, inspection result or certificate availability.
Faster review
Structured RFQ information reduces repeated clarification and helps Eric judge fit faster.
Lower risk
Unconfirmed commercial terms are kept out of public pages and social posts.
Next action
Send RFQ context through the form and wait for case-by-case confirmation.