A retail sourcing trip should not be “visit factories and take photos.” It should produce vendor-ready preparation outcomes:
clear short list
spec pack drafts
packaging decisions
readiness score
next-step timeline
Here’s a simple playbook for a retail sourcing trip; home décor supplier team (especially around Shenzhen).
Before the trip: the 3 documents that save everything
Category brief (price band, target customers, store format)
Retail-ready spec pack template (so suppliers fill it on the spot)
Supplier readiness scorecard (so you don’t get emotionally fooled by samples)
During the trip: your meeting agenda (60–90 minutes per supplier)
10 min: quick capability intro (ask for proof, not claims)
20 min: sample review + sample staging and setup check
20 min: packaging walkthrough (drop risk, corners, scuff control)
20 min: spec pack filling + quote assumptions
10 min: reorder plan (lead time + variant control + spare parts)
The “professional sourcing team” advantage (why teams win)
A professional team assigns roles:
one person: product + aesthetics
one person: packaging + QC
one person: negotiation + terms + lead time
That prevents “pretty sample bias.”
After the trip: turn notes into decisions in 48 hours
score suppliers
shortlist 2–3
request revised spec packs + revised packaging
lock sampling timeline
This is how you move from travel to execution.

why we’re a good trip partner
Teruier isn’t just a supplier—you can treat us as a cross-border curation partner. We translate showroom/retail needs into factory actions, anchored by Fuzhou’s craft hometown network (materials, craftsmen, techniques) and supported by designer inputs that keep retail fit realistic. So the trip ends with vendor-ready output, not “inspiration.”
Wrap-up + Next read
If your trip doesn’t produce spec packs, packaging decisions, and reorder plans, it’s not a sourcing trip—it’s tourism.
Next: Go back to the start and align your Saudi launch by re-reading “LED Mirrors for Showrooms in KSA.”


